T.    R. 


IN    CARTOON 

Collected  and  Edited 
By 

RAYMOND   GROS 


Four    Hundred    Illustrations 

BY    LEADING    CARTOONISTS  OF    THE 

DAILY    AND    WEEKLY    PRESS 

ALL    OVER    THE    WORLD 


OF    THfr 

\  UNIVERSITY 


N     r  .  . 

'.Mcaassfc, 

THE    SAALFIELD    PUBLISHING    COMPANY 

New  York  AKRON,   OHIO  Chicago 


COPYRIGHT,    1910, 
by 

THE  SAALFIELD  PUBLISHING  COMPANY. 


Thorndike  in  the  Philadelphia  Press. 
TO 

THEODORE    ROOSEVELT 

THIS  BOOK  IS  RESPECTFULLY 
DEDICATED 


Of   THE 

•VERSI 


OF 


Homer  Davenport. 


HE'S  GOOD  ENOUGH  FOR  ME!" 


IV 


THE  CARTOONIST  AND  T.  R. 


Cartoons  are  the  salt  of  the  public  press.     It  is  the  cartoonist  who  gives 
savor  to  the  daily  newspaper  or  the  weekly  review  all  the  world  over  and 

caricature,  in  spite  of  its  buffoonery,  exaggeration, 
satire  and  even  occasional  violence,  remains  the  best 
account  of  an  epoch  and  the  truest  biography  of  a 
public  man. 

Epochs  in  American  history  are  counted  by 
presidents,  and  of  all  the  men  who  have  attained  to 
that  honor  none  has  been  so  much  the  favorite  subject 
of  the  world's  cartoonists  as  Theodore  Roosevelt; 
certainly  no  man  after  retiring  from  the  office  has 
been  kept  so  frequently  in  the  public  eye  by  their 
clever  art.  The  reasons  for  this  are  best  sought  in 
the  man.  Perhaps  he  has  in  his  own  words  given 
the  key:  "  If  I  arn  somewhat  popular,"  he  once  said 

In  the  Pittsburg  Index.      ^^    ^    wag    president>     "  it    Js    because    my    COII1- 

patriots  consider  me  almost  a  complete 
specimen  of  the  national  type.  I  was  a 
civil  magistrate;  I  became  a  soldier 
when  it  was  necessary,  and  to-day  I 
am  again  a  civil  magistrate.  I  have  six 
children.  In  every  .way  I  am  a  good 
American,  and  all  my  countrymen 
know  it." 

In  depicting  Theodore  Roosevelt, 
the    cartoonists    have    three    preferred 


THE  "  DELIGHTED  "  POSE. 


Naughton  in  Minneapolis   Tribune. 
When  the  boss  is  away,  the  mice  will  play. 

poses:  the  famous  ferociously  ener 
getic  "  Delighted  "  p  o  c  e  ;  the 
"  Preaching  ^  pose,  with  almost  vio 
lent  gestures,  and;  the  "Big  Stick  " 
attitude,  but  always  in  all  countries 
and  by  all  cartoonists,  the  accom 
modating  teeth  (which  fit  either  a 
laugh  or  a  scowl) .  American  art 
ists,  who  are  subject  to  no  censor  save 
their  editors,  have  never  stooped  to 
vulgarity  or  hate  in  depicting  Mr. 
Roosevelt,  not  even  those  whose  pub- 


lications  are  politically  opposed  to 
him  and  his  famous  policies.  Possi 
bly  because  of  the  fact  that  Mr. 
Roosevelt  has  always  enjoyed  the 
cartoonists'  art,  and  has  laughed  at 
the  delineations  of  himself  with  as 
much  glee  as  the  public,  he  has  ever 
been  proof  against  ridicule.  Foreign 
cartoonists,  who  are  so  often  irrev 
erent,  abusive  and  even  vulgar  in 
their  treatment  of  European  mon- 
archs,  have  seemed  to  have  a  particu 
lar  pencil  for  Colonel  Roosevelt. 
They  have  pricked  him,  it  is  true,  but 
never  viciously.  Edward  VII.  of 
England  they  caricatured  as  a  gross 
fat  person  fond  of  sporting  pleasures 
and  fleshly  indulgencies ;  they  have 
satirized  Emperor  William  as  a 


THE  "  BIG  STICK  "  POSE. 

on  the  stage  of  human  affairs  as 
petty,  childish,  selfish,  lustful  and 
profligate.  But  even  when  unkindest 
toward  Mr.  Roosevelt,  they  have 
never  been  brutal  or  exhibited  per 
sonal  or  national  dislike. 

In  studying  the  cartoons  in  this 
collection   made   during   the   period 


THE  "  PREACHING  "  POSE. 

scarecrow,  a  troublesome  boaster  and 
an  erratic  simpleton;  they  have  de 
picted  the  Czar  by  turns  as  a  pol 
troon,  a  coward  crazed  by  fear  of 
bombs,  a  tyrant  and  a  murderer  of 
his  subjects;  the  Sultan  they  have 
held  up  to  view  as  a  deceitful  and 
sanguinary  monster;  and  other  mon- 
archs  according  to  their  importance 


Gregg  in  the  Atlanta  Constitution. 
SUPPLICATING  THE  TOTEM  POLE. 


Lovey  in  the  Butte  Inter  Mountain, 

The   Will    o    the   Wisp  "   of    foreign   diplomacy 

F  "*""  in'°  "* 


when  Theodore  Roosevelt  was 
President,  it  will  be  noticed  that 
the  foreign  cartoonists  frequently 
represent  him  as  "  Uncle  Sam," 
or,  at  least,  dress  him  out  in  striped 
trousers  and  starry  coat,  and  al 
most  invariably  sketch  the  flag 
into  the  picture  somewhere.  It  is 
difficult  for  the  European  cartoon 
ist  to  pin  a  tab  on  a  man,  who, 
although  ruler,  and  commander- 
in-chief  of  army  and  navy,  never 
wears  a  uniform,  but  always  ap 
pears  in  the  conventional  garb  of 
his  countrymen  according  to  the 
occasion  and  the  hour  of  the  day. 
In  Europe,  where  rulers  are  deco 
rated  and  hold  actual  and  honor 
ary  commissions  in  many  armies, 
it  is  easy  to  portray  the  individual  by  means  of  decoration  and  uniform. 
The  American  cartoonist  gets  around  this  difficulty  easily  by  making  liberal 
use  of  the  cowboy  attire  and  rough  rider  uniform,  and  the  European  artist 
is  commencing  to  do  the  same. 

The  love  of  Roosevelt  for  hunting  and  his  amusing  experiences  during 
a  carefully  prepared  Southern  bear  hunt  from  which  he  returned  empty- 
handed,  much  to  the  delight  of  the  cartoonists  and  the  amusement  of  the 
public,  followed  by  the  introduction  of  that  amusing  toy,  the  Teddy  bear, 
inspired  a  considerable  number  of  cartoonists  with  the  idea  of  introducing 
a  diminutive  bruin  in  their  daily  cartoons.  The  first  to  introduce  this  idea 
was  Robert  W.  Satterfield,  a  Cleveland  cartoonist,  whose  work  has  won 
national  attention.  "  Sat's  Bear  "  is  a  feature  of  Cleveland's  daily  life. 

In  his  role  of  mediator  between  war 
ring  Russia  and  Japan,  President  Roose 
velt  furnished  a  most  lucky  windfall  to 
the  cartoonists,  especially  to  the  foreign 
ones.  The  Big  Stick  and  the  Dove  of 
Peace  for  a  time  suggested  cartoons  of 
incomparable  drollery.  This  period  was 
followed  by  the  anti-Japanese  riots  in 
California.  The  President's  intervention 
furnished  fresh  material  for  the  lively  pen 
cils  of  the  cartoonists  of  the  world,  and 
through  all  these  stirring  times  he  con 
tinued  to  pour  forth  messages  to  Con 
gress,  to  the  immense  delight  of  the  car 
toonists.  In  their  uninterrupted  succession, 
they  merely  saw  the  amusing  side  again, 


Bradley,  Chicago  Nevts. 
Mother   Columbia  has   the  kettle  boil 
ing   in   Washington.      With    little   T.    R. 
"  Vim  "  she  will   straight  away   prepare 
some   legislation. 


vn 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 
THE  PEOPLE'S  CHOICE. 


and  then  forever  the  ad 
vice  of  the  President, 
opinion  of  the  President, 
recommendation  of  the 
President.  To  be  elected 
by  the  American  people  is 
no  sinecure,  above  all, 
when  the  White  House 
harbors  a  man  who  passes 
his  time  seeing  everything, 
hearing  everything. 
Trusts,  Senate,  the  House, 
voyage  to  Panama,  New 
York  elections,  the  yellow 
question,  negro  question, 
Harriman,  all  passed  before  his  gaze  as  in  a  cinematograph;  one  affair 

scarcely  terminated  until  another  began,  and  so  to  the  last  day  of  his  admin 
istration.     Never  were  the  caricatures  so  gleesome,  witty,  cutting,  highly- 

colored.     The  exaggeration  natural  to  satire  was  not  at  all  improbable. 

Caricaturists  in  the  United  States  perhaps  never  before  presented  to  the 

public  such  well-made  designs,  overflowing  with  art  and  full  of  observation. 
Germany  is  respected,  her  Emperor  criticized;  America  is  criticized, 

her  President  praised;  incontestable  facts  shown  by  the  foreign  caricatures. 

John  Bull  has  nearly  disappeared   from  satire,  being  replaced  by   King 

Edward,  so  much  anathematized  as  Prince  of  Wales,  but  who  made  himself 

popular  by  his  policy,  carried  on  by  fine  and  skillful  diplomacy,  quietly, 

almost  in  the  shade.     However,  cari 

cature    has    never    represented    him 

with    the   President    of   the   United 

States.     The  peasant  Michel,  on  the 

contrary,  who  is  the  incarnation  of 

the   German   nation,   vanishes   com 

pletely    to    yield    his    place    to    the 

Kaiser.     In  the  cartoons  the  latter  is 

seen    sometimes    with    Uncle    Sam, 

sometimes    with    Mr.     Roosevelt. 

There  exists  a  well-marked  affinity 

between  the  two  men,  a  spirit  ad 

venturous,     audacious,     acute,     ani 

mated,  virile,  original,  sincere. 

Side  by  side  with  political  cari 

catures  (which  are  not  always  mirth 

ful)     of    President    Roosevelt,    the 

artists  —  many  American  as  well  as 

foreign  —  in  many  cases  have  amused 

themselves   at  the  expense  of  their 

model.      But  —  notwithstanding   the 


Philadelphia  Press. 
LOOK  OUT  FOR  THE  ERUPTION. 


De  Mar   in   the  Philadelphia  Re 


The  train  wrecker   (Railroad  Trust)   caught 
in  his  own  trap. 

caturists  see  nothing  but  them)  are 
not  exaggerated;  they  have  only  a 
mock-heroic  flavor.  The  seven 
deadly  capital  sins  which  contribute 
so  many  satirical  subjects  for  carica 
ture  enter  but  rarely  into  the  com 
position  of  cartoons  of  Roosevelt. 
Caricaturists  who  are  at  liberty  to 
express  what  they  please,  seem  to 
show  a  sort  of  respectful  deference 
to  their  model;  their  designs  reveal 
their  purpose  so  well  that  frequently 
they  require  no  explanation. 


violence  of  a  few — we  find  nothing 
gross,  as  I  said  before;  in  reality,  they 
never  delineate  Roosevelt  in  a  ridicu 
lous  or  deformed  aspect.  Even  in 
scandals  where  as  Chief  of  State,  he 
has  played  the  role  of  reformer  for 
some,  of  sponsor  for  the  other,  Roose 
velt,  cowboy,  colonel,  or  citizen,  bears 
always  the  manner  of  a  gentleman; 
his  visage,  gestures,  bearing,  are  per 
haps  stamped  with  joy,  anger  or  dis 
appointment,  but  he  never  appears 
ill-favored;  his  defects  (and  the  cari- 


THE  "  MEDITATIVE  "  POSE. 


THE  "  DEFYING  "  POSE." 

Other  men,  after  retirement 
from  the  Presidency,  have  dropped 
completely  from  public  view  so  far 
as  the  cartoonists  were  concerned. 
Not  so  with  Theodore  Roosevelt. 
The  cleverest  and  drollest  things  the 
cartoonists  have  indulged  in  have  had 
to  do  with  his  hunting  expedition  to 
Africa.  It  was  a  great  and  un- 
worked  field.  The  opportunities  to 
make  the  wild  animals  parties  to  the 
fun  were  without  limit,  and  the  cari 
caturists  have  had  a  wanton  revel  for 


THE  -  FIGHTING  "  POSE. 


more  than  a  year,  to  the  continuous 
delight  of  all  the  world,  and  the  chil 
dren  in  it. 

The  return  from  Africa,  and 
the  signs  of  the  wielding  of  the  Big 
Stick  in  Egypt  and  Europe  have 
only  served  to  give  the  cartoonists 
further  occupation,  until  one  wonders 
what  will  be  the  effect  of  it  all  on  a 
people  susceptible  to  the  preachments 
of  the  pictorial  art,  as  Americans  are. 
But  whatever  the  effect,  and  how 
ever  riotously  the  cartoonists  give 
themselves  over  to  their  subject,  it 
is  certain  Theodore  Roosevelt  will 
go  on  unperturbed  by  ridicule  or 
praise,  appearing  when  and  where 
he  chooses  in  his  favorite  poses — 


"  Delighted,"  "  Preaching  "  and  "  The  Big  Stick." 


Pittsburgh,  June  1,  1910. 


RAYMOND  GROS. 


WHEN  TEDDY  HEADS  A  WILD  WEST  SHOW. 


Sinclair  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle  Telegraph. 

BRIDGEPORT,  CONN.,  Feb.  1. — Believing  that  he  has  found  just  the 
thing  for  President  Roosevelt  after  the  latter  retires,  James  M.  Atlas,  a 
hotel  man  of  this  city,  says  that  he  to-day  wrote  to  the  President  and 
offered  him  a  30-weeks'  engagement  at  $10,000  a  week  to  head  a  new  wild 
west  show  under  the  name  of  *'  Roosevelt's  Congress  of  Rough  Riders.*' 


PUBLICATIONS  REPRESENTED. 

In  preparing  the  work  for  the  publisher,  it  was  found  to  be  imprac 
ticable  to  reproduce  all  the  drawings  so  generously  sent  to  me,  and  therefore 
only  about  four  hundred  of  the  most  varied  and  interesting  have  been  em 
ployed.  These  four  hundred  pictures  represent  the  cartoonists  of  the 
United  States,  England,  France,  Germany,  Austria,  Italy,  Spain,  Cuba, 
Australia,  Holland,  Hungary,  Japan,  Switzerland,  the  Argentine  Republic, 
Chile,  etc.,  etc. 

As  I  am  not  a  citizen  of  the  United  States,  and  therefore  without  partisan 
or  political  bias,  I  have  studied  to  give  the  widest  possible  range  to  the  selec 
tion,  so  as  to  include  every  variety  of  expression  of  praise  and  blame. 

It  gives  me  great  pleasure  to  thank  the  hundreds  of  cartoonists  who 
have  taken  a  keen  interest  in  contributing  their  best  drawings  for  this  book, 
and  to  say  that  I  hope  their  splendid  art  will  go  on  to  increasing  triumphs 
and  new  powers. 

My  thanks  are  also  due  to  Messrs.  W.  P.  Beazell,  H.  W.  Bernard, 
Arthur  G.  Burgoyne,  Eugene  LeMoyne  Connelly  and  Miss  C.  H.  Davis  for 
their  valued  help  in  the  production  of  this  work,  and  especially  to  my  friend, 
W.  T.  Mossman,  without  whose  generous  interest  and  assistance  it  would 
have  been  impossible  for  a  stranger  to  have  brought  this  book  to  press. 

R.  G. 


BEFORE 


Gage  in  the  Philadelphia  North  American. 
AFTER 


THE  ELECTION. 


XI 


Jack  in  the  Glenwood,  Colorado,  Post. 


ROOSEVELT 


LA 


FOLK 


WEAVER 
JEROME 


UNITED  STATES  OF  AMERICA. 

Atlanta  Constitution. 

Baltimore  Sun, 

Binghamton  Press. 

Boston   Traveler. 

Brooklyn  Eagle. 

Butte  Inter  Mountain. 

Chicago  Daily  News. 

Chicago  Inter  Ocean. 

Chicago  Record- Her  aid. 

Cincinnati  Post. 

Cleveland  Leader. 

Cleveland  News. 

Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 

Cleveland  Press. 

Columbus  Dispatch. 

Columbus  Ohio  State  Journal. 

Denver  News. 

Denver  Republican. 

Des   Moines  Register  and  Leader. 

Detroit  Journal. 

Detroit  News. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald. 

Duluth  News   Tribune. 

Girard  Appeal  to  Reason. 

Glenwood   (Col.)   Post. 

Ithaca  Saturday   Globe. 

Louisville  Courier- Journal. 

Louisville   Times. 

Memphis  News-Scimitar. 

Milwaukee  Sentinel. 

Minneapolis  Journal. 

Minneapolis   Tribune. 

Newark  Evening  News. 

Newark  Morning  Star. 

New  Orleans    Times-Democrat. 

New  York  American. 

New  York|Co//i'er's. 

New  York  Daily  News. 


New  York  Evening  Mail. 
New  York  Evening   Telegram. 
New  York  Globe. 
New  York  Harper's   Weekly. 
New  York  Herald. 
New  York  La  Follia. 
New  York  Literary  Digest. 
New  York  Success  .Magazine. 
New  York   Times. 
New  York   World. 
Omaha   World  Herald. 
Philadelphia  Inquirer. 
Philadelphia  North  American. 
Philadelphia  Press. 
Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 
Philadelphia  Record. 
Pittsburg   Chronicle   Telegraph. 
Pittsburg  Dispatch. 
Pittsburg   Gazette-Times. 
Pittsburg  Index. 
Pittsburg  Leader. 
Pittsburg  Post. 
Pittsburg  Press. 
Pittsburg  Sun. 
Pueblo  Star  Journal. 
Rochester  Herald. 
St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch. 
St.  Louis  Republic. 
St.   Paul  Dispatch. 
Salt  Lake  Herald. 
San  Francisco  Call. 
South   Bend   Tribune. 
Spokane  Spokesman-Review. 
Tacoma  Ledger. 
Toledo  Blade. 
Topeka  State  Journal. 
Washington  Dispatch. 
Washington  Evening  Star. 
Washington  Herald. 
Washington  Post. 


Xlll 


EAGLE  TILTING. 


MR.  ROOSEVELT  WINS. 


F.  C.  Gould  in  the  Westminster  Gazette,  London. 

MR.  ROOSEVELT :    "I  thought  they  might  have  wanted  me  over  there 
in  Scandinavia,  but  it  appears  to  be  all  right  now. 


Philadelphia  North  American. 

ROOSEVELT :    "  Sit  down,  gentlemen,  and  let  us  talk  this  matter 

over  calmly." 


ARGENTINE  REPUBLIC. 
Buenos  Ayres  Caras  J>  Carets. 
Rio  Janeiro  Malho. 

AUSTRALIA. 

Sydney  Bulletin. 

AUSTRIA. 

Vienna  Der  Floh. 

Vienna  Figaro. 

Vienna  Humor istische  Blotter. 

Vienna  Neue  Gluhlicter. 

CHILE. 
Valparaiso  Succesos. 

CUBA. 
Havana  La  Discusion. 

DENMARK. 

Copenhagen  Klods-Hans. 
Copenhagen   Hver  8  Dag. 

ENGLAND. 

London  Pall  Mall  Gazette. 
London  Punch. 
London  Punch's  Almanach. 
London   The  Standard. 
London   Westminster  Gazette. 

FRANCE. 

Paris  L' Illustration. 

Paris  Le  Rire. 

Paris  La  Caricature. 

Paris  New   York  Herald. 


GERMANY. 

Berlin  Kladderadatsch. 

Berlin  Lustige  Blatter. 

Berlin  £//£. 

Munich  Jugend. 

Munich  Simplicissimus.      . 

Stuttgart  Der   Wahre  Jacob. 

HOLLAND. 

De  Amsterdammer   Weefyblad  voor  Nederland. 

HUNGARY. 

Budapest  Bolond  Istofy. 
Budapest  Borsszen  Janfyo. 

ITALY. 

Milan  L'Uomo  di  Pietra. 
Turin  //  Fischietlo. 
Turin  Pasquino. 


JAPAN. 


Tokyo  Puck- 


SPAIN. 

Barcelone  Hojas  Selectas. 
Barcelone  La  Campana  de  Gracia. 


SWEDEN. 


Stockholm  Puck. 


SWITZERLAND. 

Zurich  Nebelspalier. 


xv 


xvi 


ARTHUR  G.BURGOYN 


J.  L,  DeMar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 


AIN'T  IT  A  DAISY?  " 


Homer  Davenport  in  the  New  York  Evening  Mail. 


ROOSEVELT  SPEAKING  AT  THE  LINCOLN  DINNER. 


L.  C.  Gregg  in  the  Atlanta  Constitution. 


FOR  PRESIDENT! 


L.  C.  Gregg  in  the  Atlanta  Constitution. 


STANDING  PAT! 


Der  Floh,  Vienna. 


ROOSEVELT  AS  JEWISH  PEDDLER. 
"  Nothing  to   (arbi)   trade?  " 


Drawing  by  Enrico  Caruso. 


AS  THE  CELEBRATED  TENOR  HAS  SEEN  HIM. 


Mayol  in  Caras  y  Caretas,  Buenos  Ayres. 


THE  YANKEE  PERIL  AS  ONE  ARGENTINE  JOURNAL 

SEES  IT. 

Of  South  America  he  speaks  in  a  frank,  sincere  style,  expressing  him 
self  in  this  way:    **  Here  no  one  dares  lay  a  hand  but  myself." 


Ryan  Walker  in  Girard,  111.,  Appeal  to  Reason, 


C.  M.  Payne  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazelle-Times. 


10 


THfflCJ:  AffMED  "5  HE 
WHOSE  CAUSE  IS   JUST 


Ole  May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazelle-Times. 


AN  INPREGNABLE  SHIELD. 


ii 


m 

m 


; 


m\\ 

4:>^  *£&  i ! 
•  ^0** 


Cir  in  Collier's,  New  York. 
(Copyright,  1907,  by  P.  F.  Collier  &  Son.) 


THE  THUNDERER. 


12 


Opisso  in  Hojas  Selectas,  Barcelone. 

THE  NEW  SUN  OF  YANKEE  IMPERIALISM,  OR  THE 
BRILLIANT  CHAMPION  OF  ARMED  PEACE. 


13 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  Eagle. 


BACK  IN  THE  OLD  PLACE! 


14 


J.  C.  Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


WAITING  FOR  THE  ANSWER. 


15 


E.  W.   Kemble  in   Collier's,  New  York. 
(By  Permission  of  P.  F.  Collier  &  Son,  New  York.) 


16, 


T.  VESUVIUS  ROOSEVELT. 

VERSES  BY  WALLACE  IRWIN. 

The  ordinary  hill  which  remains  forever  still, 
All  covered  o'er  with  specimens  of  botany, 
Is  hugely  safe  and  sane;  but  its  heights  seem  rather  plain 

And  its  silence  breeds  political  monotony. 
I  myself  prefer  a  mount  with  a  crater  as  its  fount, 

Dropping  firebrands  like  the  thunderstorms  of  Pluvius — 
There  is  something  half  satanic  in  conditions  so  volcanic, 
Yet  we're  proud  of  our  Political  Vesuvius. 
With  a  curious,  sulfureous 

Rumbling,  grumbling  roll  of  thunder 
Teddy's  going  to  erupt — 
Stand  from  under! 

Where  the  grafter  sleeps  content,  suddenly  the  air  is  rent 

With  a  blast  like  that  which  buried  Herculaneum; 
Railway  lobbies  cough  and  choke  in  a  cloud  of  flame  and  smoke, 

And  the  Conscript  Fathers  get  it  in  the  cranium. 
Now  Chicago  beef  is  shook,  now  the  poor  old  Spelling-Book 

Shouts:    "  Have  mercy,  sire!  your  heat  will  crack  the  shell  o'  me!" 
Now  the  mountain  heaves  its  shoulders  and  upheaves  a  ton  of  boulders, 
While  the  sparks  descend  and  roast  the  luckless  Bellamy. 
With  a  hectic,  apoplectic 

Howling,  growling  roll  of  thunder, 
Teddy's  going  to  blow  up — 
Stand  from  under! 

Though  there's  sometimes  scarce  a  puff  from  his  lid,  that's  just  a  bluff, 

For  his  calmer  moments  never  mean  security, 
And  the  Prophets  yell:     "  Look  out!  he's  intending  for  to  spout — 

There'll  be  trouble  in  the  very  near  futurity." 
No,  we  can't  foresee  just  what,  but  his  crater's  getting  hot, 
And  the  coals  will  soon  be  dropping,  as  they  must,  again 
Singeing  up  the  Tariff's  tatters  and  the  mossy  old  Standpatters — 
There's  no  telling  where  Vesuvius  will  bust  again. 
With  a  jouncing,  nation-bouncing, 

Bumping,  thumping  roll  of  thunder, 
Teddy's  going  for  to  spout — 
Stand  from  under! 


Wazques  in  La  Campana  de  Cracia,  Barcelone. 

THE  ARRIVAL  OF  THE  THREE  PRESIDENTS. 
This  is  the  visit  that  we  would  like  Spain  to  receive. 


18 


1 


G.  Brandt  in  Kladderadatsch,  Berlin. 


ROOSEVELT,  THE  TRANSMARINE  ORATOR. 


19 


Gaido  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


THE  AMERICAN  CRISIS. 

Teddy,  as  Baron  Munchausen,  tries  to  pull  himself  out  of  the  mud 
by  lifting  himself  by  his  hair.     Will  he  succeed?     The  skin  is  tough. 


20 


W.  C.  Morris  in  the  Spokane  Spokesman-Review. 

WALL  STREET  CALLS  HIM  "THEODORE  THE 

MEDDLER," 


21 


O.  P.  Williams  in  the  Philadelphia  Pufe/i'c  Ledger. 


IS  HE  RIDING  TO  A  FALL? 


22 


C.  F.   Naughton  in  the  Duluth  Evening  Herald. 


UNCLE  SAM:     *  Take  me  in  with  you,  Teddy?  " 

(President  Roosevelt  has  received   a  pass  that  will   admit  him   and   all  his   friends   to  baseball 
games  played  by  American  League  teams. — Washington  Dispatch.) 


23 


W.  C.  Spencer  in  the  Denver  Republican. 

K.AISER  WlLHELM  says:    "Good  cooks  make  the  people  contented." 


W.  P.  Canfield  in  the  Pittsburg  Sun. 

ETERNALLY  TEDDY. 

24 


IS      HO.v 
He 


.   SeODSCV~E  IT'S     C<?>^'CS       SAiO       Hf       *OucC     ACT 
HIS    FlfcST.  CHANC5.     Of     CrOiNO     TO 


IS     HOW      HE     PIP     ACT      AS     SHOWN     BY     THE      PALM  A 

JUST    IAOE    eueuc 

"W.  L.  Evans  in  the  Cleveland  Leader. 


25 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  Eagle. 


CHRISTMAS  CARDS! 


26 


Fox  in  the  Louisville    Times. 


IF  YOU  SAY  ANYTHING  AGAINST  ME— 


27 


McKee  Barclay  in  the  Baltimore  Sun. 


COLUMBIA:    "  Pianissimo,  Teddy!  " 


C.   H.  Wellington   in   Memphis  N ems-Scimitar . 

THE  MAKING  OF  A  PRESIDENT. 

By  MRS.  BELLAMY  STORER. 

*  A  cartoon  following  the  dismissal  of   Mr.  Storer  as  Ambassador  to  Vienna  because  of   Mrs. 
StoreA  activity  in  the  politics  of  the  Vatican. 


29 


,i 


(By  Permission  of  P.  F.  Collier  &  Son,  New  York.) 


Kemble  in  Collier's,  New  York. 


THANKSGIVING. 
For  these  mercies  let  us  be  truly  thankful!  " 


30 


Sucesos,  Valparaiso  (Chile). 

PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT'S  FORTHCOMING  FEAST. 
A  South  American  view  of  the  latest  application  of  the  Monroe  Doctrine. 


31 


WHITE     HOUSE 

WASHINGTON 


My  Dear  llr.  Gregg: 

That  la  a  first-class  plat 
form,  and  I  am  content  to  stand 
on  it  I   I  am  very  much  amused  and 
pleased  with  the  cartoon. 

Sincerely  yours. 


Mr.  L.  GREGG. 

"Atlanta  Constitution.'1 
Atlanta,  Caorgia 


32 


J.  H.  Cunningham  in  the  Washington  Herald. 


THE  CHARIOT  RACE. 


33 


E.  S.  Reynolds  in  the  Tacoma  Ledger. 


CHORUS :   *'  There  is  no  South,  there  is  no  North,  there  is  no  East  or  West." 


34 


Ryan  Walker  in  Appeal  to  Reason,  Girard,   111. 

The  Best  Reason  in  the  World  Why  Teddy's  Talk  Amounts  to  Nothing 
When  It  Comes  to  Doing  Anything. 


35 


Bill  Nye  in  the  Louisville  Courier- Journal. 


NOT  GOOD  ENOUGH  FOR  ME. 

*  Roosevelt    as    Colonel    of    the    Rough    Riders    tramps    on    the    Constitution.      Allusion    to    the 
prophecies  of  his  political  enemies  who  pretended  that  he  was  going  to  turn  things  topsy-turvy. 


36 


Friedrich  Graetz  in  the  Figaro,  Vienna. 


ROOSEVELT,  THE  FRIEND  OF  PEACE. 

President  Roosevelt  needed  cavalry  indeed  at  the  opening  of  the 
Jamestown  Exposition  in  order  to  crowd  back  his  admirers  by  force.  His 
features  betray  his  pleasure  at  the  thought  of  this  Capital  /ofre.* 

*  The  words,  "  A  Capital  Joke,"  were  in  English  in  the  original. 


37 


Minor  in  the  St.   Louis  Post  Dispatch. 


WITH  HIS  LITTLE  AXE. 


38 


F.  C.  Gould  in  the   Westminster  Gazette,  London. 


THE  QUIET  LIFE. 


39 


Chicago  Record -Herald. 

(Reproduced  from  the  New  York  Herald,  in  European  Edition,  Paris.) 

TEDDY:      *  This  reminds  me  of  San  Juan  Hill." 

Allusion   to   the   attacks  of   the  yellow   press   at  the   time  of   the  election. 


40 


THE  IDEAL  PRESIDENT. 

American  journalists  have  made  the  important  discovery  that  Mr. 
Roosevelt  wears  trousers  bearing  unmistakable  signs  of  having  been 
patched  (at  an  extremely  precarious  place  at  that).  This  is  considered 
by  them  the  grandest  expression  of  a  true  democratic  spirit. 


Jugend,   Munich. 

We  would  propose  that  Mr.  Roosevelt  appear  at  the  next  reception  in  the  White  House  attired 
as  shown  above.     American  enthusiasm  would  then  undoubtedly  know  no  bounds. 


Klods-Hans,  Copenhagen. 


THE  AMERICAN  RULER. 


41 


Bill  Nye  in  the  New  York  Daily  News. 


MOSTLY  SMOKE. 


42 


W.  C.  Morris  in  the  Spokane  Spokesman-Review. 


THE  NORTHERN  LIGHTS. 

The  Aurora  Borealis,  as  a  resplendent  American  flag,  lights  Peary's 
ship,  the  Roosevelt,  amidst  the  Arctic  ice. 


43 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  News. 


HE  OUGHT  TO  KNOW. 

A  glance  at  Mr.  Roosevelt's  collection  should  be  enough  to 
satisfy  his  critics. 


44 


Le  Rire,  Paris. 


PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT  AND  OLD  EUROPE. 


45 


Jack  in  the  Pueblo  Star  Journal. 


PEACEMAKER  ROOSEVELT:    "I've  mended  worse  rips.' 


46 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  News. 


AS  HIS  CRITICS  SEE  HIM. 


47 


Golia  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 

Roosevelt  out  of  the  White  House  will  be  able  to  devote  himself  to  his 
favorite  sports  which  he  adores. 


48 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  ITALY. 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  VIENNA. 


50 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  BUDAPEST. 


51 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  PARIS. 


52 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  HOLLAND. 


53 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  NORWAY. 


-54 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  BERLIN. 


55 


Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 


TEDDY  IN  LONDON. 


56 


Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 


THE  PRESIDENT  VOTES. 


57 


Feininger  in  Lustige  Blatter,  Berlin. 


TEDDY'S  WAR  CRY:    "  HURRAH!  " 


58 


Feininger  in  Luslige  Blatter,  Berlin. 


A  BIG  LITTER  OF  PRESIDENTIAL  CANDIDATES. 

*  What  do  you  say,  Uncle?     This  fat  one  (Roosevelt)  here  we  will 
keep.     The  other  three  (Bryan,  Parker,  Hearst)   we  will  drown!  " 


59 


G.  R.  Spencer   in  Omaha   World  Herald. 


"WELL,  WE  LICKED  HIM,  B'GOSH!  " 


60 


F.   E.  Johnston  in   the   Pitlsburg  Index. 


TANDING  PAT. 


VtfmAJ^Ss. 

<*    THE       •     % 

'VERSITY    5 


61   . 


Coras  p  Care /as,  Buenos  Ay  res, 


Roosevelt  mounts  his  favorite  steed, 
His  Yolanda  of  famous  breed, 
Which  lends  him  untold  force, 
Blows  clouds  of  smoke  into  the  air, 
With  a  most  contemptuous  stare. 
Parker  bringing  up  the  rear, 
Sees  roped  the  Presidential  Steer 
For  want  of  such  a  horse. 


62 


T.  McWorther  in  the  St.  Paul  Dispatch. 


Those  who  say  "  Roosevelt  is  getting  away  from  the  Republican  party  " 

are  slandering  the  party. 


63 


G.  Brandt  in  Kladderadastch,  Berlin. 

BEFORE  AND  AFTER  THE  ELECTION. 
Gently.  Brutally. 


G.  Brandt  in  Kladderadatsch,  Berlin. 

DRAW  POKER. 
He  was  not  ready  for  the  surprise. 

64 


J.  L.   De  Mar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 

MAPPING  OUT  THE  PLAN  OF  CAMPAIGN. 


IF  CROKER  WERE  EMPEROR. 

(Published    in    the    New    York    Herald    and    the    New    York    Evening    Telegram    during    the 
tmpaign  of  1900.     Reproduced  from  the  New  York  Herald,  European  Edition,  Paris,  Nov.  7,   1900.) 


65 


H.  Harmony  in  the  Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 


HE  DIDN'T  GET  THEM  ALL. 


Ryan  Walker  in  the  Girard,   111.,  Appeal  io  Reason. 


UNCLE  SAM:     "The  whole  bunch  is  blood  kin." 


67 


Homer  Davenport  in  the  New  York  Evening  Mail. 

THE  IMPORTANT  INTRODUCTION. 


Homer  Davenport  in  the  New  York  Evening  Mail. 


CERTAIN  OF  HIS  ELECTION. 


69 


C.  R.  Macauley  in  the  New  York   World. 


THE  TRAINED  ELEPHANT. 


70 


C.  R,  Macauley  in  the  New  York  World. 


71 


Hy  Mayer  in  the  New  York   Times. 

A  PRIVATE  LESSON. 


H.  ].  Westerman  in   O/iio  5ia/e  Journal,  Columbus. 

THE  RESULT  OF  THE  1906  CONGRESSIONAL 
ELECTIONS. 


C.  L.   Bartholomew   (Bart)    in  the   Minneapolis    Tribune. 


COINS  AND  COMMINS  OF  THE  POLITICAL  STAGE. 


A.  L.  Lovey  in  the  Salt  Lake  Herald. 


THE  NEW  REPUBLICAN  GAME. 


F.  E.  Johnston  in  the  Pittsburg  Leader. 


STEP  LIVELY. 


74 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  Ne»s. 


BLIND  (?)  MAN'S  BUFF. 

CHORUS:     "And  he's  peeking!" 


75 


sal  '  f 
$W- 


4*-  uw 


J,  L.  De  Mar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 


A  DELICATE  TASK  FOR  THE  PILOT. 


76 


F.  E.  Johnston  in  the  Pittsburg  Leader. 


A  SONG  AND  A  DANCE. 


77 


F.  Finch  in  the  Denver  News. 


ROOSEVELT  TO  CANNON :     '  When  you  grow  a  little  older  you  will  be 
big  enough  to  fill  my  clothes." 

*  One  of  the  rare  cartoons  where  Cannon  is  represented  without  his  traditional  cigar. 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  Eagle. 


DEE-LIGHT-ED. 


79 


L.   Earl  in  the   Bmihamton  F 


WILL  NOT  DEVIATE  FROM  HIS  COURSE. 


80 


J.  H.  Cunningham  in  the  Washington  Herald. 


THE  ARTIST. 


81 


Golia  in  Pasquino,  Turin,  Italy. 

THE  ELECTION  OF  TAFT;  OR,  ROOSEVELT'S  LAST  AND 

BIGGEST  BUBBLE. 


82 


O.  C.  Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 


MIXED  VS.  STRAIGHT. 


83 


R.  D.  Handy  in  the  Duluth  Nci»$   Tribune. 

WILL  HE  GET  THROUGH  THE  LINE? 


ORIGIN  OF  THE  "  BIG  STICK." 


The  first  association  of  Theodore  Roosevelt  with  the  phrase,  "  the  big 
stick,"  dates  from  a  speech  delivered  by  him  at  Chicago  in  1 902.  On  that 
occasion  he  said :  '  *  There  is  a  homely  old  adage  which  runs,  '  Speak  softly 
and  carry  a  big  stick,  and  you  will  go  far.* ' 

The  New  York  World,  in  an  editorial  published  September  29,  1904, 
revived  the  speech,  contrasting  it,  in  parallel  columns,  with  Roosevelt's 
Pacific  speech  to  the  delegates  of  the  Interparliamentary  Peace  Union, 
September  24,  1904. 

The  first  cartoon  embodying  the  "  big  stick  "  idea  was  published  in 
the  World  of  October  12,  1904.  It  represented  Roosevelt  mounted  on  a 
fiery  steed,  throwing  a  lasso  around  the  flying  Angel  of  Peace  and  carrying 
a  cudgel  bearing  the  words  **  big  stick  "  upon  it. 

It  is  interesting  to  notice  the  varying  changes  in  cartoons  in  the  char 
acter  of  this  stick.  At  first  it  was  simply  a  long,  round  stick  of  uniform 
thickness.  It  later  changed  to  the  knotted  club  or  bludgeon  type,  and  now 
it  is  often  seen  with  a  spear  protruding  from  the  large  end.  This  latter  form 
was  derived  from  Roosevelt's  emblem  and  the  **  mailed  fist  "  of  Emperor 
William.  William's  symbol  typifies  Power  and  Force — nothing  else. 
Roosevelt's  "  big  stick,"  although  formidable,  means  peace — but  peace 
backed  up  by  the  '*  big  stick." — Success  Magazine. 


85 


K.  L.  Russell  in  the  Washington  Post. 


THE  POLITICAL  BLACK  HAND. 


86 


J.  E.  Whiting  in  the  South  Bend  Tribune. 


STILL  IN  THE  GAME. 


87 


J.  L.  De  Mar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 

MORE  TROUBLE  FOR  THE  INTERNATIONAL 
POLICEMAN. 

Oyster  Bay  does  not  appear  to  be  precisely  a  place  for  a  rest  cure. 


88 


Scar,  New  York  Clobt. 


NOW  WATCH  THE  DIRT  FLY. 


89 


Thorndike  in  the  Philadelphia  Press. 

(The  packers  who  smiled  over  Judge  Humphrey's  ruling  in  March  now 
have  something  else  to  think  about.) 


90 


C.  P.  Bolmar  in  the  Topeka  State  Journal. 


BEWARE  THE  BIG  STICK. 

PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT:     "  I  hope,  Mr.  Castro,  you  will  not  com 
pel  us  to  resort  to  extreme  measures." 


91 


Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


THE  RETURN  OF  SAMSON. 


92 


Homer  Davenport  in  the  New  York  Evening  Mali 


VISIONS. 


93 


J.  N.  Darling  in  Des  Moines  Register  and  Leader, 

"  'Ted'  with  his  pipe  did  play  with  such  skill  that  no  one  who  heard 
him  could  ever  stand  still." 


94 


THE  TRUTH  ABOUT  THE  PANIC  OF  '08-'09. 

"  Teddy  in  the  heat  of  his  eloquence,  beating  the  table,  caused  to  fall  a  number  of  banks, 
which  were  already  worm-eaten.  Seizing  the  advantage  of  this  accident,  he  began  to  thunder 
against  business  corruption.  Yet  during  nearly  eight  years  of  his  '  reign  '  he  did  nothing  to  suppress 
these  corrupt  practices.  He  escaped  at  the  end  of  his  term  by  stirring  up  a  great  scandal. 

"  Teddy,  you  fool  nobody.  We  all  know  that  your  anger  is  put  on  to  assure  you  a  fine 
wind-up." 


95 


C.  R.  Macauley  in  the  New  York  World. 


THE  FOX. 


96 


F.  Graetz  in  Der  Floh,  Vienna. 


ROOSEVELT  IN  THE  FIELD  AGAINST  THE 
MILLIONAIRES. 

Chief  Roosevelt,  the  "Thundering  Tongue,"  on  the  warpath  against  the 

gold-devouring  palefaces. 

(Roosevelt   as    Indian   Chief,    tomahawk   and   knife    in   hand,    the   pipe   of   peace   broken    at    his    feet, 
attacks   the  millionaires   in   the   form   of   dollar  bags   mounted   on   the   golden   calf.) 

97 


J.  Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 

President  Roosevelt  sent  three  special  messages  to  Congress  Monday. 
He  has  several  more  ready  which  he  will  transmit  this  week. 


98 


J.  Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 

ROOSEVELTEO"  AND  "  TRUSTIET." 
They  certainly  love  each  other. 

(The  modern   Romeo   and  Juliet.) 


99 


J.  L.  De  Mar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 


THE  CALEBRA  CUT. 


100 


F.  Opper  in  the  New  York  American. 


SEE  MY  TEDDY  BEARS. 

(The  common  people,  tax-payers,  consumers,  wage-earners,  small 
dealers,  all  are  partisans  of  Roosevelt,  and,  in  consequence,  "  little  Teddy 
Bears  "  are  at  the  mercy  of  the  trusts.) 


101 


J.  E.  Whiting  in  the  South  Bend  Tribune. 


Roosevelt's  last  message  will  be  "  Characteristic." — News   Item. 


102 


E.  A.   Bushneil  in  the  Cincinnati  Post. 


JIU-JITSUED. 


103 


Bart  in  the  Minneapolis  Journal. 


A  SURPRISE  FOR  THE  FAT  BOY. 


104 


C-* 


,  *» 


./oO"  °~     ^" 

^\\iii»'>u' 


(vA»T»w- 


J.  S.  Clubb  in  the  Rochester  Herald. 


"  At  length  he  came  close  to  me,  and  then  he  kneeled  down  again, 
kissed  the  ground,  and  laid  his  head  upon  the  ground,  and  taking  me  by 
the  foot,  set  my  foot  upon  his  head :  this,  it  seems,  was  in  token  of  swearing 
to  be  my  slave  forever." — ROBINSON  CRUSOE. 


105 


-Pi/ 


C  K.  Berryman  in  the  Washington  Evening  Star. 


106 


C.  K.  Berryman  in  the  Washington  Evening  Star. 


107 


J.  S.  Clubb  in  the  Rochester  Herald. 


"ON  THE  PAN: 


10* 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  News. 

STILL  WAITING  FOR  THE  CHANGE. 

CHORUS:    "  Yes,  this  IS  hot  enough  for  us." 


109 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  News. 

THAT  PAINFUL  MOMENT. 
When  you  begin  to  realize  that  a  mustard  plaster  is  hot. 


no 


,'£     /    /'</     •^•'OfcVv-w     Vfe^  V 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  Nevs. 

THERE  ARE  PLENTY  OF  FIGHTING  MOROS  NEARER 

HOME. 

Not  worth  while  to  go  to  the  Philippines  to  embroil  himself;    the 
President  can  put  his  strategic  knowledge  to  use  in  the  Senate. 


111 


Gaido  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


THE  FEAST  OF  THE  OFFENDERS. 

ROOSEVELT:  "Since  the  millionaires  repulse  me,  I  am  Jelighted 
with  your  cordial  reception.  Who  knows  that  you  will  not  some  day,  by 
persevering  in  your  noble  course,  become  millionaires  yourselves?  " 


112 


Der  Wahre  Jacob,  Stuttgart. 


Saint  Theodore  preaching  to  the  sharks:  "  You  must  always  endeavor 
to  be  honest  and  upright;  you  will  never  covet  your  neighbor's  property; 
will  cease  to  oppress  the  weak  and  to  devour  them.  On  the  contrary,  you 
must  love  them,  help  and  sustain  them.  If  you  obey  not,  the  All  Powerful 
will  punish  you  severely  and  utterly  destroy  you." 

And  the  sharks  withdrew  and  continued  the  carnage.  (The  shark  is 
labeled  "  Rockefeller.") 


113 


W.  A.  Wellner  in  Lusiige  Blatter,  Berlin. 

Out  of  Pandora's  box  misfortunes  manifold  and  human  ills  came  to 
this  mundane  ball;  alas,  the  worst  misfortune  did  befall  man,  when  he 
received  the  gift  we  here  behold! 


114 


Th.   Heine  in  Simplicissimus,   Munich. 


THE  CHICAGOAN  PIG-STY. 

Even  the  hogs  blushed  with  shame  when  President  Roosevelt  revealed 
to  them  the  hideous  fate  awaiting  them  at  American  stockyards. 


115 


s 


L.  D.   Bradley   in  the  Chicago  Daily  News. 


UTILIZING  THE  SQUEAL. 
Music  as  a  coming  by-product. 


116 


C.  F.  Naughton  in  the  Duluth  Evening  Herald. 


DR.  ROOSEVELT:    "  Think  I'll  have  to  remove  the  lump/' 


117 


O.  C.  Shiras  in   the  Pittsburg  Chronicle    Telegraph, 


PILGRIM. 


118 


C.   K.   Berryman   in   t'.e   V,  ashing'on  Evening  Star. 


THE  KIND  OF  FOOTBALL  HE'D  LIKE  TO  SEE. 


119 


( '  W;m       *v  r^—^Ssfca^r 


(Copyrighted  by  Harper  &  Bros.,  New  York.) 


W.  A.  Rogers  in  Harper's 


TO  A  FINISH. 


120 


J.  C.  Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


THE  RETIRED  CHAMPION. 


121 


K,  L.  Russell  in  the  Washington  Post. 


REPORTS  FROM  THE  POLITICAL  OBSERVATORY. 

In  other  words,  the  earthen  pot  against  the  iron  one;  the  strong  and  the 

weak  cannot  go  together. 


122 


Gaido  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 

THE  MILLIONAIRES  VS.  ROOSEVELT. 

ROOSEVELT:    "It  is  easier  to  fight  with  millions  than  against  millions." 


123 


Johann  Braakensick  in  DC  Amslerdammer   Weefyblad  voor  Nederland. 


UNCLE  SAM  TO  PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT:  "  Before  you  can  bring 
about  world  peace,  you  must  establish  peace  in  your  own  land  by  killing 
the  Trust  monster." 

The  same  satire  is  often  found  in  foreign  caricatures:    "Sweep  your  own  threshold  before  you 

try  to  clean  another's." 


124 


J.  Gruelle  in  the  Cleveland  Press. 

TEDDY  AND  THE  DRAGON. 


E,.  A.   Bushnell   in   the  Cincinnati  Post. 

'  You  may  fire  when  you  are  ready,  Gridley !  " 

125 


Saturday  Clobe,  Ithaca. 

C.    ''I  '  f   0, 


A  NAUSEATING  JOB,  BUT  IT  MUST  BE  DONE. 

President  Roosevelt  takes  hold  of  the  investigating  muck-rake  himself 
in  the  packing-house  scandal. 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 


NEXT! 


126 


Bartholomew  in  the  Minneapolis  Journal. 

IN  THE  AMERICAN  JUNGLE. 


Leip  in  the   Detroit  News. 

GRACIOUS,  HE  HASN'T  CHANGED  A  BIT!  " 


127 


Manca  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 

Teddy  is  asked  to  free  the  Statue  of  Minerva,  Goddess  of  Wisdom, 
from  the  rodents  which  attack  her. 


128 


O.  P.  Williams  in  the  Philadelphia  North  American. 


CAN'T  PRY  HIM  LOOSE. 


129 


R.  Walker  in  the  Girard,  111.,  Appeal  to  Reason. 


130 


R.  Walker  in  the  Girard,  111.,  Appeal  to  Reason. 


131 


R.  Walker  in  the  Girard 


Reason. 


132 


F.  E.  Johnston  in  the  Pittsburg  Leader. 


NOT  FOR  TEDDY. 


133 


F.  Morgan  in  the  Philadelphia  Inquirer. 


YOU'RE  NEXT! 


134 


W.  A.  Rogers  in  the  New  York  Herald. 

STRENUOUS. 

The  octopus — is  it  necessary  to  say? — represents  John  D.,  who,  in 
every  caricature,  personifies  the  Standard  Oil. 


135 


^  ^IJTPV^^wsf?**         --O^ 

• 


A.  Dick  in  Newark  Morning  Star. 


SOME  CHRISTMAS  GIFT  SUGGESTIONS. 


186 


//  Fischieito,  Turin. 


THE  MIGHTY  HUNTER  RETURNS. 

The  lions  are  slain — now  let  the  trusts  tremble! 


137 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 

Roosevelt's  interest  in  the  preservation  of  Niagara  Falls  and  his  plans  for 
power  plants  cause  commercialism  to  see  a  new  face  in  the  mist. 


C.  P.  Bolmar  in  Topeka  State  Journal. 

PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT  HAS  THE  PROBLEM  OF 

HIS  LIFE. 


138 


Gaiclo  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


ROOSEVELT'S  FIRST  HUNTING. 

Before  going  to  hunt  in  Africa,  Teddy  wants  to  practice  with  his  Redskins 

(Senate  and  House). 


139 


,   Berlin. 


TEDDY'S  LATEST  CONCLUSION. 

Not  even  the  sunlight  will  I  have  in  common  with  the  other  nations 

of  the  world." 


140 


Ryan  Walker  in  the  Girard,  III.,  Appeal  to  Reason. 


OUR  POLITICAL  MOVING  PICTURE  SHOW. 

The  American  mechanic  and  farmer  have  a  free  exhibition  given  to  them 
of  Roosevelt's  opinion  of  "  drunken  cowboys." 


141 


J.  S.  Clubb  in  the  Rochester  Herald. 


THE  DONK:    "  I  believe  he's  after  my  collar,  too." 

Allusion  to  the  comments  of  W.  J.  Bryan,  who  declared  that  Teddy  had  appropriated 

all  his  political  plans. 


142 


J.  S.  Clubb  in  the  Rochester  Herald. 


JUMPING  A  HIGH  ONE. 


143 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  Eagle. 


"AFTER  YOU!" 


You  go  first>  my  dear  sin" 


144 


C.  K.  Berryman  in  the  Washington  Evening  Star. 


COUNTING  THEIR  DAYS  OF  LIFE. 


145 


C.  Kessler  in  the  St.  Louis  Republic. 


IF  JEFFERSON  SHOULD  COME  TO  LIFE. 


146 


AS  -SEEN  FROM  THE  WHITE  HOUSE 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  Eagle. 


TWO  POINTS  OF  VIEW! 


147 


J.  E.  Whiting  in  the  South  Bend   Tribune. 


ROPED. 


14S 


McKee  Barclay  in  the  Baltimore  Sun, 


THE  UNWELCOME  BUST. 


149 


Ole  May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazette-Times. 


IF  T.  R.  BECOMES  SPEAKER. 


150 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 

It  looks  to  Congress  like  too  much  Roosevelt  in  official  Washington. 


R.   M.   Brinkerhoff  in  the  Toledo  Blade. 

ROOSEVELT:     "Now,  old  man,  you  quit  your  foolin'! 


151 


II  * 

L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  News. 


THE  REAL  HERO 
Is  the  one  who  sticks  to  his  desk  at  such  a  moment. 


152 


•\     I'LL  FIX  THAI  BOri 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  £ag/e. 


SNOW  BALLS! 


isa 


C.  R.  Macauley  in  the  New  York  World. 


154 


C.  L.  Bart  in  the  Minneapolis  Journal. 


OTHER  REFORMS,  ALSO. 

THE  FAT  BOY:    "  I  fear  me  there's  more  than  reformed  spelling 

in  that  message." 


155 


C.  F.  Naughton  in  the  Duluth  Evening  Herald. 


CONGRESS  OPENS. 


156 


Krotowski  in   Ulfy,  Berlin. 


THE  RECORD! 

Another  American  victory  has  been  reported!  Roosevelt's  message 
to  the  American  Congress  was  ten  times  longer  than  the  longest  address 
ever  made  by  any  potentate!  Sovereign  rulers  of  Europe,  regain  your 
prestige ! 


157 


E.  Linley  Sambourne  in  Punch,  London. 


THE  STATIONARY  CRUSADER. 

PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT:    "Follow  me!"  (or  35,000  words  to  that 
effect.)      [See  the  President's  Message  to  Congress.] 


158 


C.  Kessler  in  the  St.  Louis  Republic. 


SOMETHING  DOING  EVERY  DAY! 


159 


C.  H.  Wellington  in  the  Memphis  Ne TVS- Scimitar. 


'  THE  DOG  THAT  ADOPTED  A  MAN." 

NEWS  ITEM :  President  Roosevelt  insists  that  there  is  nothing  to  add 
to  his  declaration  that  he  will  not  accept  the  presidential  nomination  again. 
Ex-Congressman  Grosvenor  insists  that  he  has  no  right  to  refuse. 


160 


L.  Earl  in  the  Binghamton  Press. 


CHORUS:     "  May  you  have  pleasant  dreams   and  sweet   repose,   a  nice 
soft  bed  and  all  the  clothes." 


161 


C.  K.  Berryman  in  the  Washington  Evening  Star. 

DR.  DEPEW  PRESCRIBES  A  THIRD  TERM  COURSE 
OF  TREATMENT. 


162 


C.  K.  Berryman  in  the  Washington  Evening  Star. 


THE  CONSTANT  CALLER. 


163 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 


AND  NOW  TO  BUSINESS. 


164 


,,,'¥     -lU.'.;.'-:' 


>  :-"'  rf  ^' 


> 

' 


Philadelphia  Put/ic  Ledger. 


NO  THIRD  TERM. 


165 


E.   S.   Reynolds  in   the  Tacoma  Ledger. 

PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT:     "I  hereby  announce,  once  and  for  all,  that  I 
will  not  be  taken  in  by  this  movement." 


J.  N.  Darling  in  the  Des  Moines  Register  and  Leader. 

Gracious  sakes,  Theodore,  if  you  ain't  goin'  in,  please  get  off  the 

springboard." 


166 


C.  K.  Berryman  in  the  Washington  Evening  Star. 

Ambitious  presidential  timber  being  assured,  to  their  joy,  that  Roosevelt 
really  will   not  run   for  re-election. 


167 


F.  Giaetz  in  Der  Floh,  Vienna. 


THE  LORD  OF  THE  NEW  WORLD. 

And  the  Lord  saw  everything  that  he  had  made,  and,  behold,  it  was 

'very  good1 !  " 


!•€ 


A.  Johnson  in  Kladderadasch,  Berlin. 


Sweet  Christmas  chimes  are  softly  ringing, 
To  earth  the  Angel  now  of  Peace  descends; 
His  smiles  foretell  the  blessings  he  is  bringing, 
And  yet — who  really  knows  Jvhat  he  intends! 


169 


Jeney  in  Bolond  Istofy,  Budapest. 

ROOSEVELT:    "  Can  I  offer  you  a  light  for  your  peace  pipe?  " 
PREMIER  WlTTE:   "  Thanks.     I'll  light  it  with  this  new  paper  (Ports 
mouth  treaty  with  Japan)." 


170 


Laci  von   F***  in  Humorlstischc  Blatter,  Vienna. 


PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT,  THE  PEACE  SHOWMAN. 

"  Here,  ladies  and  gentlemen,  is  the  newest  attraction.  This  bear,  a 
ravenous  beast  of  prey  subdued  by  Togo  and  Oyama,  is  now  so  tame  that 
he  subscribes  to  anything  that  is  dictated  to  him." 


171 


The  adventures  of 
NHsTheqdorHolgensonRoosevelf 

\j: 


on\m  journey  &  the  North  Pole 


Puck,  Stockholm. 


PAX  TRIUMPHANS! 


ITS 


A.  Schmidhammer  in  Jugend,  Munich. 


ROOSEVELT  &  CO. 

TEDDY:    "  Hurrah!     At  last  the  iron  mouth  of  the  cannon  is  silent!  " 
JAP  :      '  Yes,  but  now  the  tin  voice  of  the  Czar  will  be  heard  so  much 
plainer!  " 


178 


Ludwig  Stutz  in  Kladderadatsch,  Berlin. 


Having  succeeded  in  being  permitted  to  participate  in  the  negotia 
tions  of  peace,  China  is  informed  of  Russia's  determination  to  consider 
only  those  conditions  which  would  be  entirely  consistent  with  her  dignity. 
China  acquiesces  and  withdraws,  relieved  from  the  field  of  diplomatic 
operations. 


174 


Opisso  in  Hojas  Selectas,  Barcelona. 


175 


(Courtesy  of  Georg  Kalkar  \.Hver  8  Dag']). 


Klods-Han$t  Copenhagen. 


END  OF  THE  CONFERENCE. 


178 


Johann  Braakensick  in  De  Amsierdammer   Weefyblad  voor  Nederland. 


ROOSEVELT  TO  WILHELM  VOIGT  (Captain  Koepcnick) :  "  Come, 
Voigt,  take  this  wallet.  You  have  done  much  more  for  the  cause  of  peace 
than  I  have." 


177 


Farago  in   l/lfy,  Berlin. 


GRATITUDE. 

THE  ANGEL  OF  PEACE:    "  Dear  Uncle  Teddy,  you  have  been  so 
good  to  me — just  as  if  you  had  actually  been  benefited  by  the  transaction." 


178 


Gustave  Brandt  in  Kladderadaisch,  Berlin. 

THE  PEACE-MAKER. 

Before  "  cutting  "   I  will  see  if  I  get  something  out  of  the  "  deal." 


179 


Ludwig  Stutz  in  Kladderadalsch,  Berlin. 


PEACE  NEGOTIATIONS. 

Having  received  the  formal  declaration  from  Russia  that  she  would 
only  withdraw  from  the  seat  of  war  in  an  absolutely  unimpaired  condition, 
it  has  become  the  duty  of  the  peace  conference  to  be  regardful  of  this 
decision  and  to  countenance  as  much  as  possible  Russia's  advance  to  the 
rear. 


180 


Lyonel  Feininger  in  £//£,  Berlin. 


PAPA,  THE  PEACE-MAKER. 

ROOSEVELT,  addressing  Alice  and  her  betrothed :  "  Bless  you,  my 
children !  Try  to  live  always  in  peace ;  otherwise,  I  shall  be  compelled  to 
call  another  conference  to  Portsmouth." 


181 


Frilz  Gehrke  in  Ulk.  Berlin. 

AT  THE  PEACE  AGENCY. 

Witboi:  Would  you  be  good  enough  to  bring  about  peace  between 
myself  and  Trotha?  I  would  likewise  agree  to  pay  no  war  indemnifications 
whatever. 

The  above  refers  to  the  uprising  of  the  Bouzelswarts  under  their  chief,  Witboi,  in  German 
East-Africa.  This  uprising  was  finally  suppressed  by  von  Trotha,  then  in  charge  of  the  military 
affairs  of  the  colony. 

The  sign  reads:  "  Great  International  Peace  Agency.  Orders  carefully  and  promptly  executed. 
Medals,  diplomas  and  testimonials  from  several  Crowned  Heads  of  Europe." 


182 


Ulk,  Berlin. 


Roosevelt's  return  gift  to  Sweden  for  the  award  of  the  Nobel  prize 
should  be  an  oil  painting  representing  him  as  rough  rider  and  fighter  on  the 
bloody  field  of  battle. 


TELEGRAMMES. 


M.  Roosevelt  a  rec,u  bien  d'autres  telegrammes  que  ceux  qui  ont 
etc  publics. 

Merci!...  je  ne  croyais  jamais  revoir  mon  isba! — Des  milliers  de 
soldats  russes. 

Grace  a  vous,  je  conserverai  mon  autre  jambe! — Des  milliers  de  Japs. 

Mes  felicitations.  .  .  Si  j'en  retrouve  les  debris,  je  vais  tacher  de 
reconstruire  ma  maison! — Des  milliers  de  Coreens. 


Enfin.  .  .  les  fonds  russes  vont  peut-etre  remonter. — Des  milliers  de 
Francois. 

Peche  par  les  Japonais  ou  par  les  Russes,  c'est  kif-kif .  .  .  mais,  du 
moins,  on  ne  sera  plus  embete  par  les  torpilles. — Des  milliers  de  poissons  de 
Sakhaline. 


114 


PAR  HENRIOT. 


Finie,  I'annee  de  la  Comete!  Aliens  au  Caucase! — Plusieurs  families 
de  vaulours  mandchous. 

Zut.  .  .  nous  n'aurons  plus  d'operations  a  suivre... — Un  lot  dc 
sirategistes  en  chambre. 

M.  Roosevelt,  vous  nous  ruinez ! — Le  syndicat  des  fabricants  de  jambes 
de  bols. 


Plus  de  canards,  que  voulez-vous  que  je  mette  en  manchette  de  mon 
journal? — Les  directeurs  du.  .  . 

Enfin,  je  vais  preparer  la  revanche  et  faire  mon  education! — Un 
general  russe. 

Tachez  maintenant  de  faire  signer  la  paix  entre  eux  par  nos  nationaux ! 
— Une  quanlite  de  chefs  d'Etat. 

L' Illustration,  Paris. 


185 


(Copyrighted  by  Harper  &  Bros.,  New  York.) 


W.  A.  Rogers  in  the  Harper's 


THE  BUSY  SHOWMAN. 

Show's  all  right — but  Ben,  the  old  Elephant — man  will  prowl 

around  outside. 


186 


/^6/T  WHERE  010  ROOSEVELT 

[zer  HIS 

H£ 

THE    DSMOCKATIC 
AND  /  WROTE  THE-  Ft  AN  KM /SELF 


H.   Harmony   in   the   Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 


187 


Torriente  in  La  Discusion,  Havana. 


THE  MAN  OF  THE  HOUR. 

THE  CUBAN  PEOPLE:    "  I  also  congratulate  you.     I  have  cause  to  know 
the  sentiment  that  you  have." 


188 


Johann  Braakensick  in  Amsterdammer   Wee^blad  voor  Nederland. 


189 


O.  C.  Shiras  in  the  Pitisburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 

LIKELY  TO  BE  ON  THE  JOB. 
The  lineman  gets  busy. 


190 


Humoristiche  Blatter,  Vienna. 


ADVICE  STILL  NEEDED. 

ROOSEVELT:  "  See  here,  Mikado,  I  am  a  man  who  can  always  give 
good  advice  when  needed." 

MlKADO:  '*  Is  that  so?  I  wish  you  would  advise  me  how  to  get  over 
your  peace  intervention." 


191 


/ugenJ,  Munich. 


ROOSEVELT  AS  THE  ANGEL  OF  PEACE. 

"  Peace  in  the  name  of  humanity  and  of  civilization !  Peace,  dear 
friends!  Peace!  " 

(Aside)  *  The  Jap  is  getting  too  powerful,  the  Russian  has  received 
the  licking  he  deserved,  therefore :  *  make  peace ! ' 

*  In  English  in  the  original. 


192 


Jugend,   Munich. 

THE  ROUGH  RIDER'S  PIPE  OF  PEACE. 
One  end  to  be  taken  by  Japan,  the  other  by  Russia. 


193 


L'Uomo  Ji  Pietra,  Milan. 


ROOSEVELT,  THE  PEACE-MAKER. 

"  Since  none  of  the  great  European  Powers  dare  make  a  move,  I  think 
will  make  you  conclude  the  Peace." 


194 


Feininger  in  Ullf,  Berlin. 

ST.  TEDDY  preaching  to  the  fishes:  "In  the  name  of  humanity,  I 
entreat  you  to  make  peace!  After  the  war,  however,  I  would  recommend 
to  you  my  complete  stock  of  goods." 


Opisso  in  Hojas  Selectas,   Barcelona. 

Veil!  be  good,  boys,  and  throw  yourselves  at  the  feet  of  this  divinity." 


195 


E.  Wilke  in  JugenJ,  Munich. 

AUNT  FRIEDENSBERTHA  AND  THEODORE 
ROOSEVELT. 

'  Will  you  really  break  up  those  naughty  toys,  my  Angel?  " 

*  Yes,  Auntie,  dear.*'    Aside:   "  The  old  woman  actually  believes  it." 

Allusion  to  the  peace  advocate,   Bertha  Suttner    (author  of  "Arms  Down"). 

196" 


Lionella   Cima  in  L'Uomo  di  Plelra,   Milan. 

GIANT'S  WORK. 

Democracy  (personified  by  Roosevelt)  winds  up  the  tangled  threads 

of  peace. 


Pasquino,  Turin. 

ROOSEVELT,  THE  PEACE-MAKER. 

Does  it  seem  to  you  that  I  am  not  a  friend  of  Peace?     Do  you  not 
observe  that  I  have  sent  a  squadron  to  the  Pacific?  " 


197 


W.  C.   Morris  in  the  Spokane  Spokesman-Review. 


PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT'S  IDEA  OF  THE 
DOVE  OF  PEACE. 

Be  it  remembered,  moreover,  that  such  a  fleet  is  by  far  the  most 
potent  guaranty  of  peace  which  this  nation  has  or  can  have." — President 
Roosevelt,  in  a  letter  to  the  House  Committee  on  Naval  Affairs. 


198 


Borsszen  /anfco,  Budapest. 


IN  DOUBT. 


PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT:    "'  I  don't  feel  quite  certain  that  I  can 
separate  those  fellows  with  this  branch." 


199 


A.  Weisgerber  in  Jugend,  Munich. 


ROOSEVELT  AND  THE  PEACE  DELEGATES. 

ROOSEVELT  addressing  the  delegates  of  Russia  and  Japan:  "  Before 
going  to  the  peace  conference,  I  would  respectfully  ask  you  one  question: 
4  Did  you  check  your  revolvers  at  the  cloakroom?'  " 


200 


/Veue  Gliihlicter,  Vienna. 


THE  ONE  THING  LEFT. 

The  Czar  does  not  get  war  laurels.  He  does  not  want  the  palm  of 
peace  offered  by  Roosevelt.  Nothing,  therefore,  remains  for  him  but  a 
beating. 


201 


—  Cocher,  rue  Roosevelt... 

—  Ou  c'est-il,  $a  ? 

—  Imbecile  1  il  ne  sait  pas  que 
oa  vent  dire  rue  de  la  Paix  i 

Henriot  in  L' Illustration,  Paris. 


APPEARING  AT  THE  TIME  OF  THE  PORTSMOUTH 
PEACE  CONFERENCE. 


202 


L'Uomo  dl  Piclra,   Milan. 


A  CAP  MORE  POTENT  THAN  TWO  CROWNS. 

ROOSEVELT:    "  Now,  will  you  make  an  end  of  horrifying  this  world 
with  the  spectacle  of  your  war,  yes  or  no?  " 


Jamieson  in  the  Pittsburg  Dispatch. 


WHO  SAYS  THERE'S  NO  SANTA  GLAUS? 


204 


P.  B.  McCord  in  the  Newark  Evening  News. 


"TEDDY  THE  GOOD  "  IN  A  NEW  ROLE. 

"  It  is  a  very  laudable  purpose,  but  would  anybody  but  Theodore 
Roosevelt  ever  think  of  dedicating  a  Christmas  windfall  of  $40,000  for 
such  a  purpose?  " — The  Brooklyn  Times. 


205 


L.  Earl  in  Binghamton  Press. 


"  DEE-LIGHT-ED.' 


•  '206 


Amsteraammer. 


(Reproduced  from  the  Literary  Digest,  New  York.) 


ROOSEVELT :      "  My  dear  neighbor,    I   hope  that  next  year  the   Nobel 

Prize  may  be  yours." 


O.  P.  Williams  in  the  Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 


UNCLE  SAM:     'Very  fine  prize — very.     But  what's  that  gruesome 
rattling  sound  I  hear?  " 


208 


H-   Harmony  in  the  Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 


209 


Golia  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


ROOSEVELT:      'With  the  advent  of  permanent  peace,  would  I  risk 
the  loss  of  the  Nobel  Prize?  " 


Sio 


H.  S.  Osbo.n  in  the  Milwaukee  Sentinel. 


"  A  NOK-OUT  BLO." 

A  travesty  on  reform  spelling,  advocated  by  Roosevelt,  Twain, 
Carnegie,  Brander  Matthews  and  others. 


.211 


J.  L.   De  Mar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 

ROOSEVELT  AS  A  SCHOOLMASTER. 
Uncle  Sam  takes  a  lesson  in  the  New  Spelling. 


212 


C.   H.  Wellington  in  the  Memphis  News- Scimitar. 


KIDNAPPED? 


213 


Ralph  Wilder  in  the  Chicago  Record-Herald. 


THE  "REFORMED"  SPELLING  COMES  BACK  FROM 

CONGRESS. 

MR.   CARNEGIE:     "He  seems  to  have  been  among  some  bad 
company,  Theodore." 


Trist  in  the  New  Orleans   Times  Democrat. 


W.  C.   Morris  in  the  Spokane  Spo£esman-.Rev/en>. 


KIKT-OUT. 


Nearly  all  the  cartoons  apropos  the  new  orthography  adopt  a  more 
or  less  fantastic  spelling. 


215 


F.  C.  Gould  in   Westminster  Gazette,  London. 


The  Word-Eater   (Logophagus  Roosevelt!)    on  the  leaves  of  the 

Dictionary  tree. 


F.  C.  Gould  in   Westminster  Gazelle,  London. 


Professor  Roosevelt  gives  an  example  of  the  new  spelling  of  Cuba. 


216 


George  Roland  Halkett  in  Pall  Mall  Gazette,  London. 


THE  WHITE  ELEPHANT. 

THEODORE  THE  STUDIOUS:    "  Say,  old  man,  if  you're  goin'  to  interrupt 
my  studies  I  guess  I'll  have  to  annex  you." 


217 


R.   M.   Brinkerhoff  in   the  Toledo  Blade. 


CARNEGIE:    "  He's  always  been  a  sickly  child^and  people  don't 
seem  to  take  to  him  somehow." 


218 


,  Tokyo. 

CAUGHT  FAST  BETWEEN  CAPITAL  AND  LABOR. 

A  Japanese  cartoonist's  view  of  the  crux  of  the  California  Japanese  question. 


Puck,  Tokyo. 


Reference  to  the  Pacific  Coast  anti-Japanese  labor  riots;  the  long 
and  persuading  Roosevelt  message  and  the  violent  actions  of  the  Pacific 
workmen. 


219 


Go'ia  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


TEDDY  LAUGHING 

AND 

TEDDY  WEEPING. 

1.  The  Squadron  departs  for  the  Pacific. 

2.  The  Squadron  has  gone. 


220 


Hop  in  the  Bulletin,  Sydney. 


ROOSEVELT'S  "  MAILED  FIST  ACT." 
(With  a  hint  to  Australia.) 

TEDDY:  "  Down  on  your  knees,  you  young  rascal!  Do  you  want 
to  get  your  father  into  trouble?  " 

Rare  caricature  of  these  latter  days  where  Roosevelt  is  not  armed  with  his  big  stick,  but  wt'^ 
a  mailed  fist  and  where  Japan  is  personified  by  a  monkey  dressed  as  at  a  circus  in  the  uniform  of  a 
soldier. 


221 


*.  Halkc  in  Ul,  Berlin. 


AN  EXTRAORDINARY  SITUATION. 
The  scholar  has  to  chase  the  schoolmaster. 


J22 


Golia   in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


FRICTION  BETWEEN  JAPAN  AND  CALIFORNIA. 

ROOSEVELT:    "  Be  quiet!     Youngsters!     Have  you  forgotten  my 

Nobel  prize?  " 


223 


Golia  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


THE  JAPANESE  MAGIC  LANTERN. 

Teddy's   Nightmare. 


224 


Tokyo  Pud?. 


THE  FEDERAL  ARMS  ARE  TOO  SHORT! 


225 


,  Tokyo, 


LOCKING  UP  THE  GATE. 

A  Japanese  cartoonist's  opinion  of  the  laws  preventing  Japanese  work 
men  in  the  Hawaiian  Islands  from  coming  into  the  United  States. 


226 


Le  Rire,   Pa  is. 


And  to  think  that  Japan  and  the  United  States  are  separated 
by  the  Pacific!  " 


227 


,  Tokyo. 


ROOSEVELT  CHASTISING  THE  HOUND,  CALIFORNIA, 

which  brings  in  the  Japanese  pheasant  after  having  killed  the  Emigration 
Treaty  goose.     Tokyo  Pucfy  exclaims: 

"  Must  we  have  enough  confidence  in  our  neighbors  to  pocket  their  insults?  ** 


228 


Puck,  Tokyo. 


WIRELESS  CONVEYANCE. 


While  the  President,  Secretary  Metcalf  and  Ambassador  Viscount 
Aoki  are  discussing  the  San  Francisco  School-boy  affair,  wireless  convey 
ance  (which  is  more  practical  than  wireless  telegraphy)  is  busily  at  work 
between  certain  parties. 

NOTE. — The  above  was  printed  in  English  under  this  cartoon. 


229 


Tokyo. 


ERASER  OR  KNIFE— WHICH  > 

The  principal  clause  of  Article  II  of  the  treaty  between  Japan  and 
America  threatened  to  be  the  cause  of  trouble.  Tokyo  Puck  offers  Roose 
velt  the  choice  between  erasure  and  a  scrap. 


230 


May  in  the  Detroit  Journal. 


ROOSEVELT:       'Well!  are  you  going  to  adopt  him?" 


May  in  the  Detroit  Journal. 


DER  KAISER:    "  Are  you  sure  the  Fire  Alarms  are  all  O.  K.?  " 


231 


E.  T.  Reed  in  Punch,  London. 

KINDRED  SPIRITS  OF  THE  "  STRENUOUS  LIFE." 
(The  Kaiser  and  President  Roosevelt.) 


E.  T.  Reed  in  Punch,  London. 

"  CONFISCATED  BY  THE  BERLIN  POLICE." 
What  are  they  afraid  of?     Is  it  this? 

("The  Berlin  Police  have  confiscated  from  the  numbers  of  Punch  of  November  16,  1904,  the 
page  containing  the  caricature  of  the  Emperor  William  and  President  Roosevelt,  entitled  '  Kindred 
Spirits  of  the  Strenuous  Life.'  " — The  Standard.) 


232 


O.  P.  Williams  in  the  Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 


KAISER  WILLIAM:    "  I  know  how  to  use  the  big  stick  myself/* 


233 


Johann  Braakensick  in  Amsler Jammer,  Wco^blad  voor  Nederland. 


A  doctor's  degree  has  just  been  conferred  on  Emperor  William  and 
President  Roosevelt. 

DR.  WILLIAM  TO  DR.  ROOSEVELT:  "  What  do  you  think  of  making 
a  little  trip  to  the  Carnival  of  Cologne  in  our  new  dominos?  " 


234 


New  York   World. 


LATEST  ECLIPSE. 


235 


J.  L.  De  Mar  in  ihc  Philadelphia  Record. 


WHERE  WILLIAM  BEATS  THEODORE. 


236 


J.  F.  Boscovitz  in  Nebelspalter,  Zurich. 


EMPEROR  AND  IMPERIALISM. 

A  Swiss  cartoonist's  view  of  the  significance  of  the  telegraphic  sympathy 
between  T.  R.  and  William  II. 


237 


J.  F.  Boscovitz  in  Nebelsp alter,  Zurich. 


TROUBLED  FRIENDSHIPS. 

COUNSELLOR  TO  WILHELM  II:  'Why  throw  yoursejf  thus  on  the 
neck  of  every  chance  comer?  This  is  what  comes  of  it." 

The  personages  in  the  background  are  Prince  Henry,  Roosevelt  and  General  de  Wet.  The 
cartoon  refers  to  the  Kaiser's  impetuous  friendliness.  Roosevelt's  reception  of  it  was  refusal  of  the 
Frederick  the  Great  statue.  De  Wet,  who  was  not  received,  is  preparing  to  throw  stones. 


238 


Ludwig  Stutz  in  Kladderadatsch,  Berlin. 


"  SPEECH  IS  SILVER." 

The  loquacious  magpie  (the  German  Ambassador,  Speck  von  Stern- 
berg)  imparts  to  the  taciturn  eagle  the  information  that  he  wishes  to  enter 
into  closer  commercial  relations. 


!  ISS2S3!  : 
«..> 


In  the  German  Art  Exhibition,  St.  Louis. 


Lustige  Blatter,  Berlin. 


PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT:  "  Everything  considered,  my  dear*Specky, 
you  have  accomplished  all  that  was  possible  with  your  modest  materials." 

"Oh!  Mr.  President,"  answered  the  Ambassador,  "  the  greatest 
value  of  the  collection  lies  in  your  recognition." 


Torriente  in  La  Discusion,  Havana. 

THE  MAN  OF  THE  HOUR. 

Edward  VII.,  presenting  a  diploma  from  "  The  Kings  to  the  Cham 
pion  of  Peace,"  says:    "Grand  and  Good  Friend,  we  felicitate  you." 


240 


>a 

O.  C.  Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 

PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT  IS  READY  TO  FIGHT 

CONGRESS. 


241 


O.  C.  Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 


VAIN  REGRETS. 


242 


G.  Brandt  in  Kladderadatsch,  Berlin. 


It  is  one  of  Teddy's  greatest  pleasures  to  listen  to  the  records  of  two 
speeches  made  by  his  friend,  William  II.,  and  when  he  hears  the  following 
utterance :  "  Considering  the  vastness  of  the  world  and  the  diminutiveness 
of  man,  it  would  seem  impossible  that  we  are  really  the  pivot  of  the  uni 
verse,"  a  happy  smile  wreathes  his  features. 


243 


GLAUBER  5IE  MIGHT 
DIESE  ARMEE  SCHLAEGT 
DIE  FRANZOESI5CHE  IN 
GRUND  UNO  BCDEN? 

(JO     A 


Ole   May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazetie-Times. 


THE  PEACEMAKERS! 


244 


O.  C.  Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 


ROOSEVELTS  AND  HOHENZOLLERNS  CHAT 
AFTER  LUNCH. 


245 


L.  C.  Gregg  in  the  Atlanta  Constitution. 

WILLIAM  II.  TO  THEODORE: 
"Shake!^ 


246 


pes«r  R1»«J» 
BIT    Trte  TALL 

ALfALfA   °: 


R.  W.  Satterfield  in  the  Cleveland  Ncvs. 


TEDDY  AND  THE  KAISER. 


247 


J.  L.   De  Mar  in  the  Philadelphia  Record. 


HEIRS  APPARENT. 


848 


Robt.  Minor,  Jr.,  in  the  St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch. 


SEEING  ROOSEVELT. 


249 


ii^vIL  •=;/__"  ~*  ^ 


Puck,  Stockholm. 

THE  TALL  AND  SHORT  MEETING. 
Depicting  the  meeting  of  Roosevelt  and  the  Crown  Prince,  who  is  very  tall. 


250 


C.  R.  Macauley  in  the  New  York   World. 

ANDY  AND  TEDDY. 

Whaur's  Your  Teddy  Roosevelt  Now? 

Mr.  Carnegie  having  been  decorated  with   the  cross  of   the   Legion  of   Honor   for  his  work 
in  behalf  of  universal  peace. 


251 


Manca  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


ROOSEVELT:    "  In  the  name  of  America,  I  urge  you  to  disarm!  " 

THE  SOVEREIGNS  (in  chorus)  :    "  My  dear  fellow,  commence  yourself!  " 


252 


. 


J.  H.  Cunningham  in  the  Washington  Herald. 


THE  REAL  THING  IN  DENMARK. 


253 


F.  C.  Gould  in  the   Westminster  Gazette,  London. 


ONLY  A  LETTER. 

JOHN  BULL :  *  Thank  you,  Mr.  Roosevelt,  for  the  prompt  kindness 
of  yeur  Navy  and  your  People  in  this  terrible  disaster  at  Jamaica !  I  know 
your  own  ideas  about  spelling,  but  you  and  I  are  not  going  to  allow  a  single 
letter  to  make  any  difference  to  our  friendship." 

Pertinent  to  the  letter  from  the  English  Governor  Swettenham  to  the  American  Admiral 
Davis  at  the  time  of  the  Jamaica  catastrophe. 


254 


George  Roland  Halkett  in  Pall  Mall  Gazette,  London. 


A  CHRISTMAS  TOY  FOR  THEODORE. 

"  It  is  known  at  Washington  that  Mr.  Bryce's  appointment  (as  Brit 
ish  Ambassador  to  the  United  States)  has  given  Mr.  Roosevelt  the  greatest 
pleasure." — New  York  Correspondence. 


255 


E.  T.  Reed  in  Punch,  London. 


FIRST  IMPRESSIONS. 

PRES.  R-S-V-LT:  "  My!  if  he  ain't  just  a  daisy!  Most  attractive 
personally,  I  do  declare!  Hope  I  shan't  get  kind  er  hitched  up  in  them 
eyebrow  'rrangements !  " 

PROF.  BR-CE:  "  H'm!  nice  pleasant  expression.  One  who  was  not 
a  purist  in  language  might  almost  describe  him  as  a  *  peach.'  Development 
of  the  teeth  suggests  tenacity  and  strength  of  character.  Well,  well,  we 
must  try  to  avoid  them!  " 


256 


Alfred  Schmidt  in  Hver  8  Dag,  Copenhagen. 

ROOSEVELT:    "Do  you  mean  that  I  have  done  nothing  for  the  world's 
peace?     Have  I  not  sent  my  whole  fleet  to  the  Pacific?  " 


Podbirlski  in  Lustige  Blatter.  Berlin. 

AT  THE  PROFESSIONAL  PAWNSHOP. 

GERMANIA:     "  I  come  from  the  Alma  Mater.     Would  you  kindly 
re-exchange  this  professor?  " 

Referring  to  the  exchange  of  university  professo.s  between  the   United  States  and  Germany. 


Jugend,  Munich. 

PRINCE  HENRY'S  VISIT  TO  UNITED  STATES. 
SOCIAL  HANDSHAKES  AND  COMMERCIAL  INTERESTS. 

It  is  always  better  to  give  your  friend  a  hearty  handshake  before  stepping 
on  his  toes:    it  looks  better  and  it  will  hurt  him  less. 


Jugend,  Munich. 


Prince  Henry  on  alighting  from  his  special  train  made  the  remark 
that  he  had  never  traveled  at  a  greater  speed,  even  in  England. 

*  You  will  certainly  receive  better  speed  here  than  you  did  in  Eng 
land,"  replied  Roosevelt,  with  a  significant  smile. 

Allusion  to  the  lukewarm  reception  extended  to  Prince  Henry  in  England  previous  to  his 
visit  to  the  United  States  in  1902. 


258 


FREDERICK  THE  GREAT  TO  PRESIDENT  ROOSEVELT. 


Jugend,  Munich. 


"  And  no  place  can  be  had  in  Washington  for  my  statue?  "  —  "  No, 
sir/'  replied  the  President.  "  One  hundred  square  feet  occupied  by  a 
European  monarch !  —  Why,  that  would  be  a  violation  of  the  Monroe 
Doctrine." 


PLUTARCH  UP  TO  DATE. 


Jugend,  Munich. 

A  certain  gentleman  from  Berlin  appeared  at  the  White  House  to 
take  leave  of  President  Roosevelt. 

"  Dear  Mr.  President,  would  you  permit  me  to  send  you  a  souvenir 
from  Berlin  as  an  expression  of  my  gratitude  for  the  cordial  reception  you 
have  extended  to  me?  " 

"  Certainly,  with  pleasure !  But  no  more  monuments,  no  more  monu 
ments!  " 

Allusion  to  the  indifferent  and  frigid  attitude  of  the  prees  occasioned  by  Emperor  William's 
gift  of  a  statue  of  Frederick  the  Great,  offered  to  the  American  nation  as  an  expression  of  his 
personal  favor. 


259 


La  Caricature,  Paris. 


LYNCH  AND  LUNCH. 

'*  Have  a  lynched  negro  cutlet,   fried,  dear  Roosevelt?  " 
"  In  petroleum?     No,  Uncle  Sam,  our  tastes  differ." 


260 


L.  Stutz  in  KladJeradaisch,  Berlin. 

EXCHANGE  OF  PICTURES, 

OR 
SMALL  GIFTS  PRESERVE  GREAT  FRIENDSHIPS. 

ROOSEVELT:     *  You  massacre  your  Jews;  I  lynch  my  niggers." 


261 


A.  Johnson  in  the  Kladderadalsch,  Berlin. 


ON  THE  LEFT  SiDE:    Edward  embraces  Leopold   (Belgium)    and 
flirts  with  France,  who  is  supporting  Russia  with  her  right  arm. 

To  THE  RIGHT:    Teddy  with  the  helmet  of  Emperor  William  II. 


262 


J.  Braakensick  in  Amsterdammer  IVeefyblad  voor  Nederland, 


THE    SENATE    OF    THE    UNITED    STATES    AND    THE 
ARBITRATION  BILLS  PROPOSED  BY  ROOSEVELT. 

ROOSEVELT  TO  JONATHAN  :  "  There,  that  is  how  you  spoil  all  my 
work;  I  can't  present  one  of  these  treaties." 

MARIANE  (The  French  Republic)  :  "A  fine  thing,  indeed!  and  I 
who  depended  on  it." 


263 


Malho,   Rio  Janeiro. 


ROOSEVELT  AND  ROOT  IN  BRAZILIAN  EYES. 

Commenting  on  a  minor  incident  growing  out  of  local  political  ani 
mosities  in  Argentine  reports  the  following  alleged  conversation  between 
President  Roosevelt  and  the  Secretary  of  State: 

ROOSEVELT:  "  How  is  it  Brazil  gave  you  flowers  and  her  neighbor 
nation  stones?  " 

ROOT   (calmly)  :     "  Each  one  gives  what  he  has,   Mr.   President." 

"  Mr.  Root's  visit  to  South  America  was  the  chief  topic  of  the  cartoonists  among  our  Latin 
neighbors  to  the  South  during  July  and  August,  1906." — American  Review  of  Reviews. 


264 


Der  Floh,  Vienna. 


LORD  OF  THE  NEW  WORLD. 

ROOSEVELT :      *  Take  that  statue  of  Frederick  the  Great  away,  until  a 
statue  of  Monroe  has  been  set  up  in  Berlin." 


265 


Jugend,  Munich. 


KEEPING  THE  LORD'S  DAY  IN  AMERICA. 

*  Teddy,  your  fish  has  swallowed  the  bait;  why  don't  you  pull  him 
out?  " 

"  Because  I  want  to  wait  until  the  Peace-Congressional  Church  is  out." 


2*6 


Lustige  Blatter,  Berlin. 


THE  PRESIDENT  OF  COLOMBIA:   "  My  hat,  my  hat!  " 
ROOSEVELT:      "Don't  yell  so,  my  old  friend.      I'll  fish  it  out  for 
myself  directly." 


267 


An  Amusing  Book! 

L.  C.  Gregg  in  the  Atlanta  Constitution. 

AN  AMUSING  BOOK. 

How  a  Southern  cartoonist  regarded  Roosevelt's  invitation  to  Booker  T. 
Washington  to  dine  at  the  White   House. 


268 


L.  C.  Gregg  in  the  Atlanta  Constitution. 


"  TWO  SOULS  WITH  BUT  A  SINGLE  THOUGHT." 


'260 


H.  T.  Webster  in  the  Chicago  Inter  Ocean, 


THE  PRESIDENT  INSPECTS  THE  PANAMA  ARMY. 


378 


Opisso  in  Hojas  Selectas,   Barcelone. 


TWENTY  YEARS  AFTER. 

*  That's  what  you  call  arriving  in  time !     Nobody  can  deny  that  I  am 

up-to-date." 


271 


Gimenez  in  Caras  J>  Caretas,  Buenos  Ayrcs. 


THE  PEACE  HERALD. 

"  My  trip,   Mr.   President,  has  produced  fortunate  results.      Everywhere 
I  went  peace  and  concord  followed." 


272 


Caronte  in  //  Fischietio,  Turin. 


ROOSEVELT'S  ASPIRATIONS. 

Friend  Theodore  longs  for  universal  peace,  the  fraternity  of  nations, 
disarmament,  arbitration,  and  other  fine  things.  But  he  still  takes  delight 
in  the  flavor  of  a  fine  Havana  direct  from  Cuba. 


Coras  3;  Care/as,  Buenos  Ayres. 


ROOSEVELT'S  MESSAGE  TO  THE  FILIPINOS. 

'My  young  friends,  here  is  my  New  Year's  gift.     You  may  depend  that 
I  will  always  protect  you  as  I  do  to-day." 


274 


Golia  in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


IN  CENTRAL  AMERICA. 
Teddy  no  sooner  turns  his  back  than  the  children  begin  to  make  trouble. 


275 


G.  R.  Spencer  \n  Omaha   World  Herald. 


THE  NEW  PROTEGE  OF  THE  PRESIDENT. 


276 


R.  M.  Brinkerhoff  in  the  Toledo  Blade. 


"Don't  you  think  you've  flattered  her?  " 


277 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  Nevs. 

ON  THE  WAY  TO  PANAMA. 
Daily  diversions  on  shipboard;  the  President  is  It. 


278 


Jugend,  Munich. 


PLUTARCH  UP  TO  DATE. 

President  Roosevelt  informed  the  delegates  of  the  Interparliamentary 
Peace  Conference  that  he  would  in  the  near  future  invite  the  delegates  to 
a  second  conference  at  The  Hague. 

'  What  would  happen  should  America  again  desire  another  annexa 
tion?  "  queried  a  cautious  delegate. 

"  But,  man  alive,  that  would  certainly  not  occur  before  the  presidential 
elections!  "  replied  the  President,  with  a  sly  wink. 


Trist  in  the  New  Orleans   Times-Democrat. 


THE  PRESIDENT  RETURNS. 

(He  finds  a  number  of  people  waiting  to  see  him.) 

The  cartoonist  of  the  Democratic  paper  supposed  that  the  colored  gentlemen  have  come  to 
ask  the  traveler  returning  from  Panama  an  explanation  of  the  disbanding  of  the  colored  regiment  at 
Brownsville. 


279 


Torriente  in  La  Discusion,  Havana. 


THE  POLICEMAN:    *  Let  us  mobilize  the  army?     Let  us  concentrate 
the  fleet?  " 

ROOSEVELT:    "  No;  show  them  the  monuments  of  our  great  patriots.*' 

A  Cuban  satire  at  the  time  the  Revolutionists  in  Cuba  wanted  to  invade  the  United  States. 


280 


C.  R.  Macauley  in  the  New  York  World. 


THE  NEW  RECRUIT. 


281 


Feininger  in  Lusiige  Blatter,  Berlin. 


A  SOLEMN  MOMENT. 
THE  ALARM  CLOCK:    "  B-r-r-r-r-r-r-r " 


ROOSEVELT:      *  Thunder!      Six  o'clock;   oh,  yes?      Must  press  the 
button    *    *    *    *    opening  of  the  International  Exposition   (St.  Louis)." 


282 


W.  A.  Ireland  in  the  Columbus  Dispatch. 


ROOSEVELT  AND  FOOTBALL. 

"  I  have  no  sympathy  whatever  with  the  overwrought  sentimentality 
which  would  keep  a  young  man  in  cotton  wool.  Don't  flinch,  don't  foul; 
hit  the  line  hard!  " — Mr.  Roosevelt's  address  at  Harvard,  1907. 


283 


L.  D.  Bradley  in  the  Chicago  Daily  News. 


If  our  anti-race-suicide  President  wants  to  show  his  sincerity,  he  might 
turn  the  White  House  into  flats  that  wouldn't  exclude  children. 

The  President  would  enjoy  his  rest  immensely  if  he  adopted  the  amusing  idea  of  the  artist. 


284 


O.C.  Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle   Telegraph. 

OF  COURSE  NOT. 
T.  R.  was  born  a  man  and  does  not  want  to  make  himself  a  monkey. 


285 


E.  T.  Reed  in  Punch's  Almanack,  London. 


WHAT  WILL  BECOME  OF  ROOSEVELT  WHEN  HIS 
TERM  OF  OFFICE  IS  CONCLUDED? 

Will  a  Music  Hall  Syndicate  Will  the  Bishop  of  London,  in 
offer  a  three-years'  engagement  in  recognition  of  his  muscular  Christi- 
Europe,  at  £500  a  week,  for  a  anity,  give  him  a  curacy  in  the 
fifteen-minutes'  turn  of  bronco-bust-  Shadwell  or  Wapping  district,  with 
ing,  revolver-shooting,  etc.  ?  the  prospect  of  working  his  way 

up  the  river  to  something  better? 


286 


E.  T.  Reed  in  Punch's  Almanack,  London. 


Will   he  become  a  City  Alder-          Or  will  he  accept  an  invitation 


man  and  eventually  rise  to  the  title 
and  dignity  of  Sir  Theodore  Roose 
velt,  Bart.,  Lord  Mayor  of  Lon 
don? 


from  the  Emperor  of  Sahara  to  act  as 
Deputy  Emperor,  under  the  name  of 
TEDI-ROZW-el-TIN  during  His 
Majesty's  visits  to  Paris? 


Enrico  Caruso  in  La  Follia  di  New   York- 


BON  VOYAGE!  AND  GOOD  LUCK  IN  AFRICA. 


Homer  Davenport  in  the  New  York  Evening  F.I  ail. 


WHEN  THE  CAT'S  AWAY,  THE  MICE  PLAY. 


289 


Robt.  Minor,  Jr.,  in  the  St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch 


THE  KING  IS  DEAD;    LONG  LIVE  THE  KING! 


290 


Robt.  Minor,  Jr.,  in  the  St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch. 


IMMUNE! 


291 


Pasquino,  Turin. 


MEETING  OF  SOVEREIGNS  IN  THE  CENTER  OF  AFRICA. 

His  MAJESTY  THE  KING  OF  THE  DESERT:  "  In  the  name  of  that 
Nobel  whose  prize  covers  you  with  glory,  O  Teddy,  I  implore  you  to 
spare  other  thousands  of  my  subjects." 


292 


Burton  Link  in  the  Pittsburg  Press. 


TEDDY  AT  HOME  IN  AFRICA. 


293 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 

Gosh,  this  tastes  good!     I  haven't  had  anything  to  eat  since  mother 

disappeared!  " 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer, 

ROOSEVELT :    '*  Let  me  see,  there's  one  for  each  member  of  the  Cabinet 

and — two  for  Taft!  " 


294 


Payne  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazelle-  Times. 


This  conception  of  Payne's  refers  to  the  imaginary  rage  and  dis 
appointment  of  Mr.  Roosevelt  when  he  came  away  from  his  Louisiana  bear 
hunt  without  getting  a  single  shot  at  bruin.  The  coon  in  the  cartoon  ex 
claims:  "  Ain't  this  the  wild  place!  " 


295 


Payne  in  the  Pittsburg*  Gazelle-  Times. 


A  SUPPOSITION  IN  THE  ABSENCE  OF  DETAILS. 


296 


J.  S.  Clubb  in  the  Rochester  Herald. 

THE  ARRIVAL. 
Apropos  Roosevelt*s  bear  hunt  in  Texas  and  how  the  game  had  warning. 


.291 


I'LL    500(1 
Bt    FOR&oTTCH 


Ole  May  in  the  PUtsburg  Cazetie-Times. 


AND  HE  WAS  A  MIGHTY  HUNTER. 


293 


J.  N.  Darling  in  Des  Moines  Register  and  Leader. 


ROOSEVELT  (in  camp)  :    "I  wish  I  could  get  some  one  at  the 
White  House  who  could  cook  like  this." 


299 


Victor   in  Pasquino,  Turin. 


TARTARIN  IN  ITALY. 

THE  STUFFED  WILD  BEASTS  IN  THE  MUSEUM:    "  Look  out! 
Tartarin  is  coming." 


300 


C.  H.  Cunningham  in  the  Washington  Herald. 


COMING  EVENTS  CAST  THEIR  SHADOWS  BEFORE. 


301 


Nelson  Harding  in  the  Brooklyn  Eagle. 


"WHILE  I'M  IN  ITALY." 


Manca  in  Pasqulno,  Turin. 


WHAT  ROOSEVELT  HUNTS  AS  A  JOURNALIST!  (Canards.) 


302 


G.  Hager  in  the  Seattle  Post-Iniciligcncct , 


"  I  beg  your  pardon,  is  this  New  Orleans?  " 

Reference  to  President   Roosevelt's  visit   to   New  Orleans   to  inspect  the  proposed   campaign 
against   mosquitoes   bearing   the   germ   of   yellow   fever. 


Leip  in  the  Detroit 


TWO  SOULS  WITH  BUT  A  SINGLE  THOUGHT. 


303 


R.   M.   Brinkerhoff   in   the  Toledo  Blade. 


"NOT  BAD,  EH,  OLD  MAN?" 


304 


Robt.   Minor,  Jr.,   in   the  St.   Louis  Posl  Dispatch. 


THE  ROOSEVELT  FAREWELL  PARADE. 


McKee  Barclay  in  the  Baltimore  Sun. 

TROUBLE'S  BREWIN'I 

There'll  be  the  dickens  to  pay  in  the  Fourth  Estate  before  long! 


305 


Thomas  in  the  Detroit  News. 


VALENTINE'S  DAY  IN  AFRICA. 


306 


Ole  May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazette-Times. 


GONE.  BUT  NOT  FORGOTTEN. 


sor 


Punch,  London. 


A  SITTER;  OR,  BIG  GAME  TO  THE  LAST. 
MR.  ROOSEVELT:    "  Steady,  Kermit.     We  must  have  one  of  these." 

(The  cable  reports  say  Mr.  Roosevelt  was  delighted  with  this  cartoon,  and  expressed  a  desire  to 
have   the  original  drawing.) — Reproduced   from   the   Literary   Digest,   New   York. 


308 


R.  W.  Satterfield  in  the  Cleveland  Nevs. 


1799_1910. 


309 


Donahey  in   the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 


AS  EGYPT  SEES  HIM. 


310 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer, 


THE  WRONG  TUNE. 


311 


Donahey   in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 


"TALK  ABOUT  BEING  PRESIDENT!" 


312 


Leip  in  the  Detroit  News. 

LUXOR,  May  22. — RooseveH  rode  to  the  tomb  of  the  Kings  on  a  donkey. 


May  in  the  Detroit  Journal. 

ROOSEVELT:     "And   I'm  climbing  Pyramids!" 


J.  C.  Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


"  CIVILIZATION  AT  LAST." 


314 


Ole  May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazelle-Times. 


WHISKERS?     NOT  EVEN  IN  AFRICA! 

OYSTER  BAY,  N.  Y.,  March  18. — Ex-President  Roosevelt  will  be 
his  own  barber  in  Africa  during  the  year  he  will  spend  there  at  the  head  of 
the  Roosevelt-Smithsonian-African  expedition.  He  does  not  intend  to  grow 
a  full  beard,  as  has  been  reported  and  pictured  recently. 

The  ex-President  has  purchased  a  dozen  sticks  of  shaving  soap  at  a 
village  drug  store  and  has  been  practicing  the  use  of  a  razor  since  leaving 
Washington. 

At  first  it  was  difficult  for  Mr.  Roosevelt  to  manipulate  the  razor 
because,  during  his  seven  years*  occupancy  of  the  White  House,  he  had 
been  shaved  at  his  office  there  by  a  negro  barber  who  was  employed  on 
the  executive  office  staff. 


315 


Porter  in  the  Boston   Traveler. 


HANDLE  WITH  CARE! 


816 


J.  P.  Rigby  in  the  Pittsburg  Press. 


THE  RETURN. 


317 


^ t 

Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer, 


SIGHTSEEING  IN  EUROPE. 


318 


j.  C.  Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


THE  CONCERT  OF  THE  POWERS. 


319 


J.  H.  Cunningham  in  the  Washington  Herald. 


THE  COMET. 


320 


Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


THE  NEXT  COMET. 


321 


Robt.  Minor,  Jr.,  in  the  St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch. 

THE  BIG  SHOW. 

At  the  Top  of  the  Tent. 


322 


H.  Harmony  in  the  Philadelphia  Public  Ledger. 


IF  TEDDY  SET  THE  STYLE. 


C.  H.  Winner  in  the  Pittsburg  Post. 


ON  THE  ANXIOUS  SEAT. 


324 


Minor  in  the  St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch. 


JUST  LOOK! 


325 


W.  P.  Canfield  in  the  Pittsburg  Sun. 

PINCHOT  AND  TEDDY. 
Little  Drops  from  Above. 


326 


J.  C.  Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


THE  MODERN  NAPOLEON  AND  MARSHAL  NEY. 


327 


C.  H.  Winner  in  the  Pittsburg  Post. 

THERE'LL  BE  ANOTHER  ERUPTION  WHEN 
PINCHOT  MEETS  TEDDY. 


328 


R,  W,  Satterfield  in  the  Cleveland  Wen*. 


329 


Donahey  in  the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 


MT.  ETNA:    "Guess  I'll  let  up  for  awhile;  here  comes  Teddy." 


C.  H.  Winner  in  the  Pittsburg  Post. 


THE  MOST  STARTLING  FIGURE    . 
NAPOLEON." 

Will  History  Repeat? 


SINCE 


331 


J.  C.  Terry  in  the  San  Francisco  Call. 


THE  HUNTER  AND  THE  HUNTED. 


332 


l~Stt  BY  THE 
LINES  IN  YOUR 
HAND     MRTAFT 
THAT  YOU  WILL 
6E  THE. 
REPUBLICAN 
NOMINEE 
FOR 


W.  P.  Canfield  in  the  Pittsburg  Sun. 


THE  FORTUNE  TELLER. 


333 


O.  C.  Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle  Telegraph. 


ONE  TIME  THAT  THE  KAISER  WAITED. 

Emperor  William  of  Germany  was  compelled  to  wait  20  minutes  for 
Theodore  Roosevelt  yesterday  at  the  University  of  Berlin.  Royal  etiquette 
requires  that  his  majesty  be  not  kept  waiting.  The  incident  worried  the 
courtiers,  but  Colonel  Roosevelt  wasn't  fazed  a  bit. 


334 


Shiras  in  the  Pittsburg  Chronicle  Telegraph. 


TEDDY  AND  MONSIEUR  FRENCHI  IN  DEAR  PAREE. 


335 


tSIGHT  .SEERS  TKE/1- 
THE  WKOLE  <SKOW  TODAY 


Ole  May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazette- Times. 


THE  TABLES  TURNED. 


336 


Ole   May   in   the   Pittsburg   Gazelle-Times. 


A  PAUSE. 


337 


Ole  May  in  the  Pittsburg  Gazette-Times. 


BACK  AMONG  THE  OLD  FOLKS. 


338 


Thomas  in  the  Detroit  News. 


TEDDY  IN  THE  LAND  OF  HIS  ANCESTORS. 


339 


AmslerJammer. 


(Reproduced  from  the  Literary  Digest,  New  York.) 


DAME  HOLLAND:    "  Welcome  to  the  home  of  your  fathers!  " 


340 


McKee  Barclay  in  the  Baltimore  Sun. 


THE  FAUNAL  NATURALIST:    "If  ever  in  my  life  I  felt  that  I 
believed  in  the  conservation  of  Internal  Resources,  it  is  at  this  very  moment.'* 


341 


El  Fischietto,  Turin. 


This  would  be  the  most  appropriate  exit  from  Europe  for  T.  R. 


342 


E.  W.   Kemble  in   Collier's,   New  York. 
[By  Permission  of  P.  F.  Collier  &  Son,  New  York.) 


"TEDDY'S  COMING  BACK!  " 


343 


W.  P.  Canfield  in  the  Pitlsburg  Sun. 


WHEN  TEDDY  COMES  HOME. 


344 


Donahey   in   the  Cleveland  Plain  Dealer. 

A  FUTURE  GUEST  AT  THE  WHITE  HOUSE. 
"  My,  how  this  place  has  changed." 


345 


W.  P.  Canfield  in  the  Pittsburg  Sun. 


DEE-LIGHT-ED! 


346 


Rowland  R.  Murdoch  in  the  Pittsburg  Press. 

HOW  THE  ARTIST  UNDERSTANDS 
"T.  R.  IN  CARTOON." 


347 


INDEX 


O.   C.   Shiras   in   the   Pittsburg   Chronicle    Telegraph. 


Barclay,  McKee .28,  149,  305,  341 

Bartholomew,  C.  L.  (Bart).- 73,  104,  127,  155 
Berryman,  C.  K 

106,  107,  119,  145,  162,  163,  167 

Bolmar,  C.  P 91,  138 

Boscovitz,  J.  F 237,  238 

Braakensick,  Johann. ..  .  124,  177,  189,  234,  263 
Bradley,  L.  D.. vii,  44, 

47,  75,  109,  110,  111,  116,  152,  278,  284 

Brandt,  G 19,  64,  179,  243 

Brinkerhoff,  R.  M 151,  218,  277,  304 

Bushnell,  E.  A 103,  125 

Canfield,  W.  P 24,  326,  333,  344,  346 

Caronte     273 

Caruso,    Enrico 7,  238 

Cir 12 

Cima,   Lionella 1 97 

Clubb,  J.  S 105,  108,  142,  143,297 

Cunningham,  J.  H 33,  81,  253,  301,  320 

Darling,    J.    N 94,    166,  299 

Davenport,    Homer iv,  3,  68,  69,  93,  289 


DeMar,    J.    L 

-    ix,  2,  65,  76,  88,  100,  212,  236,  248 

Dick,  A 136 

Donahey viii,    126,    138, 

151,  164,  294,  310,  311,  312,  318,  330,  345 


Earl,    L 

Evans,   W.   L. 


.80,  161,  206 
..25 


Farago    1 78 

Feininger,    Lyonel 58,  59,    181,    195,  282 

Finch,   F 78 

Fox 27 

Gage    xi 

Gaido    20,  112,  123,  139 

Gehrke,    Fritz 182 

Gimenez , 272 

Golia 48,  82,  210,  220,  223,  224,  275 

Gould,  F.  C xiv,  39,  216,  254 

Graetz,    Friedrick 37,  97,    168 

Gregg,  L.  C vi,  4,  5,  32,  246,  268,  269 


348 


COPENHAGEN 

SCIENTIFIC 
SOCIETY 


Leip  in  the  Detroit  News. 

ROOSEVELT  IN  COPENHAGEN. 


Gruelle,   John    B 

49r  50,  51,  52,  53,  54,  55,  56,  98,  99,  125 

Hager,  G 303 

Halke,   F 222 

Halkett,  George  Roland 217,  255 

Handy,  R.  D 84 

Harding,  Nelson..  14,  26,  79,   144,    147,    153,  302 

Harmony,   H. 66,  187,  209,  323 

Heine,  Th 115 

Henriot    184,    185,    202 

Hop  221 

Ireland,   W.  A 283 

Jack   xii,  46 

Jamieson   204 


Jeney    170 

Johnson,    A 169,  262 

Johnston,   F.  E 61,  74,  77,  133 


Kemble,  E.  W 16,  30,  343 

Kessler,  C 146,    159 

Krotowski   ..  ..157 


Laci   von    F*** 171 

Leip   127,  303,  313,  349 

Link,    Burton 293 

Lovey,  A.  L vii,  73 

Macauley,  C.  R 70,   71,  96,    154,  251,  281 

McCord,  P.  B 205 

McWorther,  T..  -.63 


149 


'And  in  his  time  a  man  plays 
many  parts."-—  Shakespeare. 


1 — Cowboy.     2 — Historian.     3 — Police  Commissioner.      4 — Assistant  Secretary   of 
the  Navy.     5 — Rough  Rider. 


Mahoney,  Felix 

Manca 128,  252,  302 

May,  Ole 

11,  150,  244,  298,  307,  315,  336,  337,  338 

May 231,  313 

Mayer,  Hy 72 

Mayol  8 

Minor,  Robert,  Jr , 

38,  249,  290,  291,  305,  322,  325 

Morgan,  F , .  .  1 34 

Morris,  W.  C 21,  43,  198,  215,  350,  351 

Murdoch,  Rowland  R .347 

Naughton,  C.  F.  .  . v,  23,    117,    156 

Nye,  Bill 36,  42 

Osborn,    H.   S 211 

Opisso 13,  175,  195,  271 

Opper,   F 101 

Payne,  CM..  10,  295,  296 


Podbirlski 257 

Porter    316 

Reed,  E.  T 232,  256,  286,  287 

Reynolds,   E.  S , 34,    166 

Rogers,  W.  A 120,  135,  186 

Rigby,  J.   P ....317 

Russell,  K.  L 86,  122 

Sambourne,  E.  Linley 1 58 

Satterfield,  R.  W 247,  309,  329 

Scar    89 

Schmidhammer,    A 1  73 

Schmidt,    Alfred 257 

Shiras,   O.   C v,  vi, 

ix,  x,  xiii,  xv,  57,  83,85,  118,  190,202, 
241,  242,  245,  285,  334,  335,  Index,  353 

Sinclair     x 

Spencer,  G.  R 60,  276 

Spencer,  W.   C 24 

Stutz,  Ludwig....  ..174,  180,  239,  261 


350 


6— Governor  of  New  York.    7— Vice-President.    8— President.    9— Peace-Maker. 
10 — Mighty  Hunter  and  Author  all  the  time. 

(Drawings  by  W.  C.  Morris  in  the  Spokane  Spokesman' Review.) 


Terry,  J.  C..15,  92,  121,  314,  319,  321,  327,  332 

Thomas 306,    339 

Thornciike in,   90 

Torriente 188,  240,  280 

Tnst    .  ..215,  279 


Victor 


300 


Walker,  Ryan.... 9,  35,  67,   130,    131,    132,    141 

Wazques 18 

Webster,    H.    T 270 

Weisgerber,  A 200 


Wellington,  C.  H 29,   160,  213 

Wellner,  W.  A 114 

Westerman,    H.   J 72 

Whiting,  J.  E 87,  102,  148 

Wilder,  Ralph 214 

Wilke,   E 196 

Williams,  O.  P 22,  129,  208,  233 

Winner,  C.  H 324,  328,  331 

POEMS. 

Burgoyne,   Arthur   G 1 

Irwin,   Wallace 17 


OF  THE 

VER5JTY  | 

,  .-^nfc^fc-,    -X* 


351 


The  Omaha   World  Herald. 


THE  TWO  DOVES  OF  PEACE. 


358 


THE  1»END(I1 


353 


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